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If the Commanders Want a Big, Strong Defensive End, Consider Elijah Roberts

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: AUG 31 Houston Christian at SMU

Photo by Matthew Visinsky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Elijah Roberts, EDGE
School:
Southern Methodist University | Conference: ACC
College Experience: Redshirt Senior | Draft Age: 23 (Week 1)
Height / Weight: 6’4”/ 285 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 4th-5th round

Player Comparison: Tyrone Crawford / Dayo Odeyingbo

College Statistics

TacklesDef InterceptionsFumbles
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGSoloAstCombTFLSkIntYdsIntTDPDFRYdsFRTDFFAwards
2020*Miami (FL)ACCFRDL522400.000000001
2021Miami (FL)ACCFRDL735810.500000000
2022Miami (FL)ACCJRDL863910.000000000
2023*SMUAmericanSRDL142116371310.000030002
2024SMUACCSRDL13171835117.500011002
Career474944932618.000041005
Miami (FL) (3 Yrs)2011102120.500000001
SMU (2 Yrs)273834722417.500041004

Defense & Fumbles Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 4/1/2025.

Player Overview


A consensus four-star recruit out of high school, Elijah Roberts committed to his local university, playing for the Miami Hurricanes. However, due to struggling to find playing time, he transferred to Southern Methodist University in 2023. It was there his career took off, showing the talent that made him a highly sought recruit. Over 27 games in the last two seasons, Elijah Roberts totaled 72 combined tackles, 24 tackles for loss (TFL), 17.5 sacks, four passes defended, and four forced fumbles. He earned conference honors and was invited to the 2025 East-West Shrine Bowl.

Elijah Roberts is an intriguing power rusher with experience in 3-technique and standing up in wide 9 alignments. He has good, active hands that he uses to collapse the pocket. He uses this to his advantage to affect the run and passing game. Elijah is quick and violent enough to hit gaps before the guards can beat him to it. With Elijah being a violent tackler, it makes him a player to always account for. But power is mainly what Roberts has to rely on. A number of Elijah’s improvement stems from his lack of lateral agility desired for the position. His subpar change of direction, sideline pursuit, rushing bend, can be attributed to this. It makes Roberts a liability in space. In all, Roberts is projected to be a rotational defensive end with the upside of a starter. Roberts is projected to play in a 3-4 defense but he can also play in a 4-3. He is projected to be an early Day 3 selection in a deep edge defender draft class.

Awards & Recognition

  • East-West Shrine Bowl participant (2025)
  • Action Sport All-American First Team (2023)
  • All-AAC Second Team (2023)
  • All-ACC Honorable Mentions (2024)

Metrics


Source: nfl.com

Elijah Roberts is a DE prospect in the 2025 draft class. He scored a 6.82 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 640 out of 2012 DE from 1987 to 2025.https://t.co/9xmvtBUJ1x pic.twitter.com/EhXQPZ94z3

— Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb) March 31, 2025

A look at this year's edge rush draft class measuring their production (min. 10% pressure rate) against their Next Gen athleticism score. pic.twitter.com/nPQ7evMGLz

— Ben Baby (@Ben_Baby) March 28, 2025

Strengths

  • Heavy and stiff hands that stun tacklers and drive them back.
  • Great linear power that drives tackles backwards.
  • Able to squeeze rushing lanes.
  • Quick to beat the guards to the gaps.
  • Violent tackler, able to dislodge the ball from ball carriers.
  • Hot motor with stamina to last all game.
  • Able to stack and shed blockers.

Weaknesses

  • Average lateral agility. Makes him a liability in space.
  • Stiff when changing directions or sideline pursuits.
  • Doesn’t have the speed or lateral agility to bend around tackles.
  • Does not have a good backup plan when initial power moves fail.
  • Stout, dense build but comes off as a “tweener”.
  • Can get fooled by complex runs with misdirections and stunts.
  • Has missed 17% of his tackles for his career.

Let’s See His Work


Elijah Roberts has very quickly become one of my favorite players in this entire class

Watch the LT on that first clip... Yeesh pic.twitter.com/d3wvDmm9Lo

— Eli Berkovits (@BookOfEli_NFL) March 27, 2025

Interviews

How Will He Fit On The Team


EDGE is the premier position Washington has yet to properly address in the offseason. Depending on how the draft board goes, the Commanders are looking for an impactful player who can fill in their pass rush and upgrade the run defense. In the mold of previous players, Elijah Roberts has the looks and versatility of a Dan Quinn EDGE defender. He is an early Day 3 player who can set the edge in the run game and make tackles in the backfield. With great power rushing skill, Roberts can collapse the pocket, cause pressure, even if he doesn’t immediately get to the quarterback. Roberts might not have the freakish athleticism that comes with his size but he has the traits to be a rotational all-around contributor in the defensive line room. While Roberts does not have all the traits of a traditional 4-3 EDGE, he has the strength and effort you can not teach.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/2/...end-consider-elijah-roberts-nfl-draft-profile
 
Key NFL offseason dates for 2025

temp_roger_goodell.0.jpg


The Commanders’ offseason program dates: pic.twitter.com/Tm7wCgTQTv

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) April 3, 2025

Washington’s team website recently published a list of key offseason dates. You may want to bookmark this page for handy reference between now and the end of May.

February

  • Feb. 6: NFL Honors
  • Feb. 9: Super Bowl LIX, Caesars Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Feb. 10: Waiver system begins for 2025. With certain exceptions, a 24-hour claiming period will be in effect through the entire year; however, waiver requests made on Friday and Saturday of each week will expire at 4:00 p.m., New York time, on the following Monday. Players with at least four previous pension-credited seasons whom a club desires to terminate are not subject to the waiver system until the day after the trading deadline.
  • Feb. 17: HBCU Combine, Ochsner Sports Performance Center, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Feb. 18: Beginning this date through 4:00 p.m., New York time on March 4, clubs may designate Franchise or Transition Players.
  • Feb. 22: HBCU Legacy Bowl, Yulman Stadium, Tulane University
  • February 24 - March 3: NFL Scouting Combine, Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Indiana

March

  • March 4: Prior to 4:00 p.m., New York time, deadline for clubs to designate Franchise or Transition Players. College Pro Days begin. Workouts of a school’s Pro Day-eligible players during the days leading up to Pro Day activities are prohibited. Private dinners, meetings, interviews are permitted.
  • March 4 - April 16: Draft-Eligible Facility Visits Begin. Clubs are permitted to 30 non-local players for physical exams/visits; no on-field workouts.
  • March 10-12: Negotiation (“Legal Tampering”) Period. During the period beginning at 12:00 noon, New York time, on March 10 and ending at 3:59:59 p.m., New York time, on March 12, clubs are permitted to contact, and enter into contract negotiations with the certified agents of players who will become Unrestricted Free Agents upon the expiration of their 2024 Player Contracts at 4:00 p.m., New York time, on March 12.
  • March 12 - End/Start of League Year. Deadline at 3:59:59 p.m., New York Time, for clubs to exercise individually negotiated options for 2025 on all players who have option clauses in their 2024 contracts, subject to any earlier deadline specified in a player’s contract.
  • Prior to 4:00 p.m., New York time, clubs must submit Qualifying Offers to their Restricted Free Agents with expiring contracts to retain a Right of First Refusal/Compensation.
  • Prior to 4:00 p.m., New York time, clubs must submit a Minimum Salary Tender to retain exclusive negotiating rights to their players with expiring 2024 contracts who have fewer than three Accrued Seasons of free agency credit (ERFAs).
  • Top 51 Rule is in effect. All clubs must be under the 2025 Salary Cap prior to 4:00 p.m., New York time. All 2024 NFL player contracts will expire at 4:00 p.m., New York time.
  • The 2025 League Year and Free Agency signing period begin at 4:00 p.m., New York time.

The first day of the 2025 League Year will end at 11:59:59 p.m., New York time, on March 12. Clubs will receive a Personnel Notice that will include all transactions submitted to the League office during the period between 4:00 p.m., New York time, and 11:59:59 p.m., New York time, on March 12.

Trading period for 2025. Trading begins at 4:00 p.m., New York time, after expiration of all 2024 contracts.

  • March 30 - April 2: Annual League Meeting, The Breakers, Palm Beach, Florida

April

  • April 16: Deadline for clubs to time, test, visit, interview, or conduct a physical examination with a draft-eligible player at its club facility.
  • April 18: Deadline for Restricted Free Agents to sign Offer Sheets
  • April 21: Clubs with returning Head Coaches may begin offseason workout programs.
  • April 23: Deadline for Prior Club to exercise Right of First Refusal to Restricted Free Agents who signed offer sheets.
  • April 24-26: NFL Draft, Green Bay, Wisconsin
  • April 29: Deadline for Prior Club to send “April 29 Tender” to its unsigned Unrestricted Free Agents. If the player has not signed a Player Contract with a Club by July 22 or the first scheduled day of the first NFL training camp, whichever is later, he may negotiate or sign a Player Contract from that date until the Tuesday following the 10th weekend of the regular season, at 4:00 p.m., New York time, only with his Prior Club.

May

  • May 1: Deadline for Clubs to exercise Fifth-Year Option for players selected in the first round of the 2022 Draft.
  • May 2-5 or 9-12: Clubs may elect to hold their one three-day post-Draft rookie minicamp from Friday through Sunday or Saturday through Monday on one of the two weekends following the Draft.
  • May 12: Rookie Football Development Programs begin.
  • May 14-18: NFLPA Rookie Premiere, Los Angeles, California.
  • May 20-21: Spring League Meeting/Coach Accelerator, Minneapolis, Minnesota


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/2/5/24359314/key-nfl-offseason-dates-for-2025
 
Hard Knocks has changed the rules; Washington is now eligible for this year’s program

NFL: NFL Annual League Meeting

Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

Will we see the Commanders on HBO this year?

Over the years, many NFL fans have become familiar with the rules that govern which teams can (or can’t) be forced to appear on Hard Knocks, the popular HBO series that fans love, but which is often perceived as a potential disruption or distraction to the team-building process that takes place during training camp.

One of the rules that allowed a huge number of teams to opt out of appearing on the program was that a team that had made a playoff appearance in either of the prior two seasons was exempt.

Suddenly, that rule is gone, and that changes things considerably.


Hard Knocks has loosened its rules on which teams can be forced into the Training Camp edition.

The new rules for who CAN'T be forced to participate:
— Teams with a first-year head coach
— Teams featured in that season’s in-season edition (covering a full division)
— Teams on… pic.twitter.com/InF6x6u5VU

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) April 3, 2025

20 teams now available for this year’s Hard Knocks

ARI, ATL, BAL, BUF, CAR, CIN, DEN, GB, HOU, KC, IND, MIA, MIN, NYG, PHI, PIT, SF, SEA, TEN, WSH

— DraftKings (@DraftKings) April 3, 2025

With the Commanders having been in the most recent NFC playoffs, we’d all been working under the assumption that they would be exempt from being forced to appear on Hard Knocks in ‘25 or ‘26. With the change in eligibility rules, it’s now possible that the league owners could choose to feature the Commanders on Hard Knocks.

I may be biased because of my personal devotion to the Washington franchise, but I think that most NFL fans would find a season of Hard Knocks that focuses on the burgundy & gold to be compelling viewing.

The most obvious reason is fan fascination with Jayden Daniels who is popular for all the right reasons. Coming off of his incredible rookie season, I suspect NFL fans would love to get a deeper look at the player and the man.

The core of the team’s success in 2024, however, seemed to be the head coach, Dan Quinn, who proved to be anything but a tired ‘retread’. On the contrary, Quinn showed up in Washington last year invigorated and committed to applying what he’d learned from the past — both his successes and failures. I can’t help but think that his presence would add to the television viewing experience.

Likewise, his coaching staff, and in particular, offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury, should hold wide appeal to NFL fans, many of whom held strong opinions about the former Cardinals head coach. Coverage of the “Kliff cliff” in the second half of last season made for entertaining headlines and panel discussions on ESPN as disaster was first predicted and then failed to materialize as the Commanders were among the most prolific offenses in the league and the team had playoff success that had eluded Washington for over three decades.

Another factor in the making of good TV is variety. Dan Quinn, this week, confirmed that the team is interested in holding joint practices with two teams again this year. Mike Vrabel said that the Patriots were talking to the Washington brass about hosting the Commanders in camp. Joint practices offer a nice change of pace to the makers of Hard Knocks, who have the opportunity to weave in some alternate story lines.

Of course, the Commanders’ Cinderella 2024 season has its own appeal, as it provides a lot of grist for the mill in Episode 1 of the six-part series. The Hard Knocks crew would have a treasure trove of exciting finishes and winning time moments to review from 2024, not to mention the ability to celebrate the early success of the league’s newest ownership group.

The Washington team has never been featured on Hard Knocks, though a brawl (or series of brawls) between the Redskins and Houston Texans during joint practices ended up featured on the 2015 iteration of the series, which covered the Texans’ training camp. With the ownership change that occurred two years ago, it may be time for Washington to emerge from the shadows and return to its former position as a featured franchise of the NFL.

With 20 of 32 teams now eligible for the 2025 season of Hard Knocks, there will be several teams that could offer compelling storylines, but I suspect that the Commanders story in 2025 would garner as much interest from NFL fans as any other and more than most.

I’m not necessarily trying to pitch an appearance on Hard Knocks to Commmanders fans. The potential for distraction and disruption seems very real, and I don’t want anything to interfere with the payoff that the team should enjoy for all the hard work being put in by all of the coaches and players. That said, I certainly would tune in with interest every week if the league chose Washington to be featured in the next season of Hard Knocks.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/3/...ington-is-now-eligible-for-this-years-program
 
Arian Smith Could Be the Commanders’ New Deep Threat

NCAA Football: Clemson at Georgia

Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Arian Smith, WR
School:
University of Georgia | Conference: Southeastern
College Experience: Redshirt Senior | Draft Age: 23 (Week 1)
Height / Weight: 6’0”/ 180 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 6th-7th round

Player Comparison: Chris Harper

College Statistics

ReceivingRushingScrimmage
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGRecYdsY/RTDY/GAttYdsY/ATDY/GPlaysYdsAvgTDAwards
2020*GeorgiaSECFRWR428643.0121.51-9-9.00-2.337725.71
2021*GeorgiaSECFRWR4310234.0225.511515.003.8411729.32
2022*GeorgiaSECSOWR11719828.3118.00000.0719828.31
2023*GeorgiaSECJRWR14815319.1210.913333.002.4918620.72
2024GeorgiaSECSRWR144881717.0458.455410.803.95387116.44
Career4768135619.91028.989311.602.076144919.110

Receiving & Rushing Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 4/4/2025.

Player Overview


A two-sport athlete (track & field) from Mulberry HS and Lakeland HS (FL), Arian Smith committed to University of Georgia as a four-star recruit. He competed in the 100m, 200m, and long jump with Mulberry. Arian Smith also competed in track & field with Georgia until 2023, where he earned first-team All-American (2021) for track and qualified for the SEC Championship with 10.4 in the 100-meter dash. With full commitment towards football, Arian broke out with 48 receptions, 871 total yards (817 receiving yards, 54 rushing yards), and 4 receiving touchdowns in his 2024 season. He was a 2025 Senior Bowl participant and is scheduled for a Top-30 visit with the Washington Commanders.

Speed is what defines Arian Smith’s game. He is a track athlete and ran one of the fastest 40 times at the Combine. He averaged at least 17 yards per reception on a heavy diet of go routes, seams, and comebacks. But Arian made the most of his routes and is still improving his route tree. Smith has solid release and is able to work through jams and win through contact. He is also a willing blocker and has good technique. Smith is capable of navigating through traffic to pick up more yards after the catch. Yet, Smith struggles with concentration drops (10 in 2024) and is clunky when trying to start-and-stop or change directions. Smith also has an extensive injury history which partially explains his limited production. Teams selecting Arian Smith on Day 3 are hoping to get a vertical threat receiver who could add more routes to take advantage of his speed.


Busy last few weeks for Georgia WR Arian Smith.

One of the most explosive pass-catchers in the class, Smith met virtually with the offensive staffs of the Patriots, Titans, 49ers, and Raiders last week, and will meet with the Commanders today, source said.

— Ryan Fowler (@_RyanFowler_) March 25, 2025

Awards & Recognition

  • Senior Bowl participant (2025)

Metrics


Source: nfl.com

Arian Smith is a WR prospect in the 2025 draft class. He scored an unofficial 9.43 #RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 197 out of 3441 WR from 1987 to 2025.

Splits projected, times unofficial.https://t.co/fkYi1DjBeP pic.twitter.com/QSDCmglBrs

— Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb) March 2, 2025

Strengths

  • Blistering vertical speed. Eats up cushions instantly.
  • Able to navigate through traffic after the catch.
  • Willing blocker with good technique.
  • Good at ball tracking.
  • Big play waiting to happen (17 yards/reception)

Weaknesses

  • Awkward changing directions, stops & starts, and fakes.
  • Limited route tree.
  • Lean body frame.
  • Needs better catching technique (10 drops in 2024).
  • Poor play strength, goes down easily.
  • Happens to run into defenders.

Let’s See His Work


Arian Smith and Dominic Lovett in the gauntlet at the NFL Combine pic.twitter.com/4xSriwx54m

— Graham Coffey (@GrahamCoffeyDC) March 1, 2025

Arian Smith is reportedly "quietly receiving" comparisons to Jameson Williams within NFL draft rooms.

Many NFL scouts reportedly believe Smith's stock is going to "skyrocket" after his long awaited combine performance.

"He's going to run in the 4.2's. More than likely early… pic.twitter.com/Wbosfwd2Lz

— NFL Rookie Watch (@NFLRookieWatxh) February 22, 2025

Arian Smith with a crisp cut to shake off the DB and catch the TD pic.twitter.com/iDCxxscoTa

— Jason Allwine (@JFootballwine) January 28, 2025

.@GeorgiaFootball WR Arian Smith with a fantastic catch during @seniorbowl 1-on-1s. Good release, consistent subtle hand fighting, high pointing the ball. Good stuff pic.twitter.com/7pVnbFee4S

— Trevor Sikkema (@TampaBayTre) January 29, 2025

Interviews

How Will He Fit On The Team


Washington added a litany of receivers via free agency and trade. One aspect they lost with the departure of Olamide Zacchaeus and Dyami Brown was speed, and speed is what Arian Smith has in spades. In Smith, Washington is hoping to fill the Dyami Brown size hole with another burner while betting on his development on short routes. While the wide receiver room is crowded this season, Arian Smith could find himself a niche role as the big-play threat in the following seasons.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/4/...-commanders-new-deep-threat-nfl-draft-profile
 
Bhayshul Tuten’s Blazing Speed Would Boost the Commanders’ Backfield

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: SEP 27 Virginia Tech at Miami

Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Bhayshul Tuten, RB
School:
Virginia Tech University | Conference: Atlantic Athletic Conference
College Experience: Senior | Draft Age: 22 (Week 1)
Height / Weight: 5’9”/ 206 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 3rd-4th round

Player Comparison: Isiah Pacheco / Lamar Miller / Chase Brown

College Statistics


North Carolina A&T



Virginia Tech

RushingReceivingScrimmage
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGAttYdsY/ATDY/GRecYdsY/RTDY/GPlaysYdsAvgTDAwards
2023*Virginia TechACCJRRB131738635.01066.4272398.9218.420011025.512
2024*Virginia TechACCSRRB1118311596.315105.423813.527.420612406.017
Career2435620225.72584.3503206.4413.340623425.829

Rushing & Receiving Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 4/5/2025.
Kick ReturnsPunt Returns
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGRetYdsY/RetKRTDRetYdsPRTDAPYdAwards
2023*Virginia TechACCJRRB131955028.920001652
2024*Virginia TechACCSRRB1137123.700001311
Career242262128.220002963

Kick & Punt Returns Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 4/5/2025.

Player Overview


Bhayshul Tuten started his collegiate career with the North Carolina A&T Aggies after graduating from Paulsboro (NJ) as a zero-star recruit. Becoming a full-time starter in his sophomore season, he broke the school record with 1,363 rushing yards and 13 rushing touchdowns. Building on that momentum, he transferred to Virginia Tech where he was the full-time starter. The next two seasons, he continued the production with 2,021 rushing yards and 25 touchdowns in 24 games. Tuten also totaled 50 receptions, 320 receiving yards, and 4 receiving touchdowns with the Hokies. Tuten also has kick return experience, primarily in 2023, where he returned two kickoffs to the house. Tuten garnered honors in both schools, such as Third Team All-ACC in 2023 and Second Team All-ACC in 2024. He was also a Senior Bowl invitee.

Tuten Bhayshul is a dynamic running back that combines explosive breakaway speed with patience, toughness, and contact balance. A lot of his carries came from the shotgun/pistol formation with Virginia Tech. He is a big play waiting to happen, able to change speeds in the same play. He runs with good pad level and is able to maintain contact balance through rushes. Though Tuten is fast, he is not as quick laterally. His path to being an every-down back relies on Bhayshul improving his pass blocking and expanding on his limited route tree from the backfield. Other negative marks on his game include ball security (eight fumbles in the last two seasons) and having a list of nagging injuries. Bhayshul Tuten finds himself in a strong running back class where he is likely to be drafted in Rounds 3-4 while his overall assessment would have him drafted a round earlier.

Awards & Recognition

  • All-Big South First Team (2022)
  • FCS Third Team All-American (2022)
  • Third Team All-ACC (2023)
  • Second Team All-ACC (2024)
  • Senior Bowl Invitee (2025)

Metrics


Source: nfl.com

Bhayshul Tuten is a RB prospect in the 2025 draft class. He scored a 9.32 #RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 132 out of 1935 RB from 1987 to 2025.

Pro day pending for remaining tests.https://t.co/tGGZhRHcHw pic.twitter.com/T7pLnFx2aY

— Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb) March 11, 2025


Source: nfl.com

Strengths

  • Blistering home run speed. A big play waiting to happen.
  • Patient runner, adjust speeds when necessary.
  • Good contact balance and runs with good pad level.
  • Willing pass blocker with good pad level.
  • Has kick return experience with some production (2 return TDs).
  • Has good hands receiving out of the backfield.
  • Able to make defenders miss in space.
  • Tough runner between tackles.

Weaknesses

  • Ball security issue (8 fumbles with Virginia Tech).
  • Mostly linear speed, not as fast moving laterally.
  • Mainly ran screen and wide routes out of the backfield.
  • Needs to be more consistent in staying in front of his blockers in pass protection.
  • Knee injury concern.

Let’s See His Work

Interviews

How Will He Fit On The Team


Washington needs more juice in the running back room. The effectiveness of the running game from the running backs declined as the 2024 season progressed. Austin Ekeler was dealing with multiple concussions and Brian Robinson looked as if he didn’t have much to offer. It was the consensus Washington not only needed more depth but home-run ability in the running back room.

The solution could be from as close as Blacksburg, Virginia. Bhayshul Tuten has experience taking carries from the shotgun and running between the tackles with success. He is also used to catching screen passes and is a willing pass blocker. Even if Tuten doesn’t win the starting running back job in his rookie season, he can be a rotational back while also competing to be the Commanders next kick returner.

Tuten’s path to becoming a starting running back with the Commanders will depend on fixing his ball security and staying healthy until the opportunity comes. In Bhayshul Tuten, Washington could be drafting a future starter and a dynamic weapon for the offense and special teams.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/5/...ington-commanders-backfield-nfl-draft-profile
 
Washington Commanders mock draft with trade back

Syndication: South Bend Tribune

MICHAEL CLUBB/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The NFL Draft is just under three weeks away and much discussion has centered around how Adam Peters will fill the remaining holes on the roster with only two picks in the top 100. Trading back out of round one would be ideal, but it takes a willing partner to do so.

In this mock draft, I traded back with Cleveland, who moved to 29 to select Ohio State WR Emeka Egbuka. I received picks 33 (second round) and 67 (third round) for allowing the Browns to select their star receiver and get that fifth year of team control at the end of round one.




Pick 33 (RD2 - From Cleveland): Benjamin Morrison, CB, Notre Dame

  • Injury concerns drop Morrison out of round one, and Adam Peters pounces. At a tad over 6’ and a sturdy 195 pounds, Morrison can be brought along slowly until he’s ready to take the field. Like Jer'Zhan Newton in 2024, the value here is just too good to pass up with an early pick in round two. He is a scheme-diverse outside corner who can play man or zone effectively. Morrison would pair nicely with Lattimore on the outside and gives Washington a formidable cornerback room with solid depth to boot.

Pick 61 (RD2): Jayden Higgins, WR, Iowa St.

  • In Higgins, Washington finally gets the big outside target to pair opposite Terry McLaurin. At 6’4” 214 pounds with 4.4 speed and a 39” vertical, he is a downfield threat who can win contested catches. Higgins also has the ability to line up in the slot and win verses smaller corners and safeties with his size and box-out prowess.

Pick 67 (RD3 - From Cleveland): Oluwafemi Oladejo, EDGE, UCLA

  • Femi Oladejo is a work in progress at EDGE, however his upside is very intriguing. He may end up being a situational pass rusher as a rookie while he continues his development, but if that career trajectory holds true, he could eventually become Dan Quinn’s “LEO”.

Pick 128 (RD4): Jordan James, RB, Oregon

  • James is not the biggest running back, but he plays well above his listed 205 combine weight and should be able to add 10 pounds without losing any quickness. He can come in and provide a nice change-of-pace option and receiving threat out of the backfield as a rookie with the hopes of being the guy in 2026 and beyond.

Pick 205 (RD6): Andres Borregales , K, Miami

  • Borregales, who had a private workout with the Commanders in Miami, will battle in training camp to take over kicking duties. As with most rookie kickers, there could be some bumps along the way, but if he could iron those out, Washington could have their kicker for the next decade plus.

Pick 245 (RD7): Xavier Truss, OL, Georgia

  • Truss is a developmental lineman with the versatility to play guard or tackle. His movement skills are not the best, so guard may end up being his landing spot if he makes the 53-man roster as a rookie.


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/5/24401741/washington-commanders-mock-draft-with-trade-back
 
Daily Slop - 6 Apr 25

NFL: APR 27 2023 Draft

Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

Riggo’s Rag

Commanders must buck increasing trend to bolster Super Bowl hopes in 2025


Duplicating the Buccaneers’ model might be the right move...

Over the last four Super Bowls, the winning team has had a roster among the top 10 youngest in the league. Outside of the 2024 Philadelphia Eagles, the other three winning teams over the last four years have also been top 10 in the number of Day 2 draft picks on the roster.

The Commanders will have to buck that recent trend if they want to be Super Bowl champions this season. This is something the Tampa Bay Buccaneers accomplished not so long ago with the third-oldest roster in the league.

Getting a franchise quarterback changes everything. Just look at how Daniels elevated what was a subpar roster in 2024. The reason that the Commanders have some of the least homegrown talent in the league is a direct correlation to just how poorly the Ron Rivera-led regime drafted.

The year before Tom Brady joined the Buccaneers, the team had gone 7-9 in Bruce Arians’ first year. But, as we mentioned before, having a franchise quarterback can elevate your franchise.

Along with Brady, the Buccaneers brought in other key veterans including Rob Gronkowski, Antonio Brown, LeSean McCoy, and Leonard Fournette. They also re-signed Ndamukong Suh to a one-year deal and tagged Shaquil Barrett, both of whom had joined the franchise in 2019.

Jason Pierre-Paul, who the team traded for in 2018, was also re-signed to a two-year deal before the Super Bowl-winning season. He would go on to make the Pro Bowl.

With the quarterback question answered, the Commanders look to be duplicating this formula by re-signing key veterans from last year’s team. These include Bobby Wagner, Zach Ertz, and Marcus Mariota.

It wouldn’t be the first time Washington won a Super Bowl with an aging roster either. The 1991 squad had one of the highest average ages of a championship team in NFL history.


Riggo’s Rag

Commanders should not be worried about Jayden Daniels’ sophomore regression


The silly narratives have already begun.

Now that Daniels has set such a high standard early on, there will be no more room for patience as he continues to grow. Therefore, some around the league believe he is fated to disappoint in 2025.

An anonymous executive compared the hype following Daniels’ rookie season to that surrounding the Houston Texans signal-caller C.J. Stroud a year ago, when the Ohio State product conducted a similar turnaround. The AFC South club went from three wins in 2022 to 10 in 2023. They won a playoff game and were projected to take the next step into Super Bowl contention last time around.

The Texans compiled the same record and playoff success from 2023. Stroud’s statistics regressed, throwing for fewer yards, touchdowns, and more than doubling his interception count.

Washington has capitalized off of its magical title game run by putting all of the right pieces in place around Daniels, notably trading for wide receiver Deebo Samuel Sr. and offensive tackle Laremy Tunsil. The Commanders’ roster figures to be much more talented than a season ago. That’s what happens when you have a rookie contract to build around your franchise player.

Regressions like Stroud’s are the exception, not the rule. It can be considered fair to temper expectations for Daniels and the Commanders in 2025 at the risk of getting too carried away. Realistically, all signs are they should only continue to improve.


Commanders Wire

Draft analyst says Commanders should not take a receiver in the first round


Is there a wide receiver that the Commanders should consider drafting that would be a good value selection at No. 29?

Jeremy Greene, Sportsocracy host and NFL draft analyst, was a guest on the “Take Command” podcast with Logan Paulsen and Craig Hoffman, and was quite entertaining and informative in attempting to answer that very question, Thursday.

“No.”

That’s how Greene responded when asked by Hoffman: succinct and right to the point. Then Greene elaborated further.

“I will go ahead and tell you, I am very low on this receiver class.

You may have noticed Luther Burden (Missouri) was not listed as a receiver the Commanders should consider in the first two rounds. What did Greene have to say regarding Burden?

“The character issues with Luther Burden? Can confirm... I am not doubting your natural athleticism or your natural God-given ability. What I am doubting is your role and how I am going to manufacture your touches, because you are not a good route-runner...Can you develop into a natural route runner? Your attitude is kind of a big deal in that. Because I am going to have to teach you something you should have learned five years ago...It’s hard to get him the ball because he is not a big guy nor a good route-runner...Every time I watch Luther Burden, he goes down about ten spots for me.”


Podcasts & videos

Commanders INSIDER Chick Hernandez from NFL Annual League Meeting | Dan Quinn, New Era, and More!​



NFC East links

Giants Wire

Report: New York Giants’ Joe Schoen, Brian Daboll are ‘working as separate entities’


Pat Leonard of the New York Daily News reports that more than at any other point in their tenure, Schoen and Daboll are “working as separate entities.”

Mara publicly blamed the previous regime’s failures on a lack of communication and collaboration between GM Dave Gettleman and head coach Joe Judge. Schoen and Daboll projected a united front and worked as a complementary pairing early on, having arrived together from Buffalo in the first place.

Gradually, however, that dynamic has shifted to the point that Schoen and Daboll now more than ever are working as separate entities, sources say.

This offseason, there have been some notable changes. Many will point to Daboll’s lack of presence at certain Pro Days, but that isn’t necessarily outside of his norm. However, he and Schoen holding separate press conferences when they have traditionally held joint press conferences, is.

Moreover, Leonard reports that there “was some hope” from members of the front office and personnel department that Daboll would get the boot.

Daboll noticeably then met the media alone on Jan. 6, standing behind a lonely podium inside the Giants’ practice facility on the turf. Schoen followed that with a solo press conference of his own in the team’s indoor auditorium, seated on stage behind a table.

The new optics of those press conferences were not lost on anyone inside or outside the building who understands how the organization works.

Some sources have said, in fact, that there was some hope on the front office/personnel side of having the opportunity to reset with a new coaching staff after the Giants’ 3-14 season. But with Daboll retained, a once mutual marriage now feels more like a forced one.

All aTwitter


Started watching RBs today. TreVeyon Henderson up first. Finished 3 games - can see why all Commanders fans love him. Play style screams Peters/Quinn, skillset fits perfectly with Kingsbury.

— Mark Bullock (@MarkBullockNFL) April 5, 2025


NFL players to retire this offseason:

— WR Julio Jones
— G Zack Martin
— OT Terron Armstead
— DE Brandon Graham
— DE Sam Hubbard
— OT Jason Peters
— S Micah Hyde
— K Mason Crosby
— C Mitch Morse
— DT Michael Pierce
— LB/S Keanu Neal
— DE John Cominsky

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) April 6, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/C2vWqCdWQc

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 5, 2025

It’s a beautiful night for spring football under the lights. ⁦

The @XFLDefenders⁩ start the night with a pickle. pic.twitter.com/vNE2hyQp0y

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) April 6, 2025

THE DEFENDERS STUN THE STALLIONS

DC takes down the reigning champs pic.twitter.com/n6ESdyQO14

— United Football League (@TheUFL) March 30, 2025

lol pic.twitter.com/K7wfH1Gn67

— Mason Kinnahan (@Mason_Kinnahan) April 6, 2025

Alex Ovechkin Career Goals Counter Bobblehead from @FOCOusa https://t.co/nZfe6U1rpR pic.twitter.com/byn2LxIQZ7

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) April 5, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/6/24399348/daily-slop-6-apr-25
 
Daily Slop - 5 Apr 25 - Alex Ovechkin ties Gretsky’s goal scoring record on Friday night at Capital One

temp_Ovi___Gretsky.0.jpg


A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

Commanders.com

10 draft prospects for Commanders fans to watch in 6th round


The opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of the team.

In preparation for the draft, Commanders.com will look at 10 players who the Commanders could draft in each round they have a pick. After starting with the seventh round, we’re moving on to the sixth round, where the Commanders pick No. 205 overall.

KeAndre Lambert-Smith, WR, Auburn: Lambert-Smith has been a reliable receiver over the last three seasons and is coming off his best campaign with 981 yards and eight touchdowns with Auburn. He has a slender build at 190 pounds, so he’ll have to put on some size, but he ran a 4.37 at the combine and is good at tracking the ball. Those traits will convince a team to take a chance on him.

Elijah Roberts, EDGE, SMU: Roberts transferred from Miami to SMU and had his two best seasons with 17 sacks and four forced fumbles. A team captain in 2024, Roberts is a solid power rusher who can crash the pocket but will need time to develop as a run defender.

Woody Marks, RB, USC: Marks makes up for his lack of elite speed by being a versatile, all-around back with 4,562 total yards and 36 touchdowns over five seasons. He also knows how to take care of the football, as he only had one fumble in 608 career rushing attempts.

Jake Briningstool, TE, Clemson: Briningstool isn’t the biggest player but has enough size to be helpful as a blocker and pass-catcher. He knows how to find soft spots in zone coverage and make defenses pay for letting him get open with 17 career touchdowns.


Commanders.com

Commanders announce 2025 offseason dates


Players will begin reporting to the team facility in Ashburn, Virginia, on April 22, kicking off a seven-week period for the new roster to prepare for the 2025 regular season. Here are the dates you should keep in mind from now until June:

  • First Day: April 22
  • Rookie minicamp: May 8-11
  • Phase One: April 22-25; April 28-May 1
  • Phase Two: May 5-8; May 12-15; May 19-22
  • Phase Three: May 27-30; June 2-6
  • Minicamp: June 10-12

Here is an explanation for the three phases of the offseason workout program:

  • Phase One: consists of the first two weeks of the program with activities limited to meetings, strength and conditioning, and physical rehabilitation only.
  • Phase Two: consists of the next three weeks of the program. On-field workouts may include individual or group instruction and drills, as well as “perfect play drills,” and drills and plays with offensive players lining up across from offensive players and defensive players lining up across from defensive players, conducted at a walk-through pace. No live contact or team offense vs. team defense drills are permitted.
  • Phase Three: consists of the next four weeks of the program. Teams may conduct a total of 10 days of organized team practice activity, or “OTAs.” No live contact is permitted, but 7-on-7, 9-on-7, and 11-on-11 drills are permitted.

Riggo’s Rag

Jonathan Allen takes veiled swipe at previous Commanders’ regime after exit


Jonathan Allen had nothing but good things to say about how Adam Peters and the new regime handled his departure. He was less complimentary about those who held prominent positions before their arrival.

When probed about what Allen was looking for in his new team, there was a veiled swipe at previous years with the Commanders before Josh Harris, Peters, and Quinn took charge. He wasn’t interested in going back to an environment where players weren’t just there for the money. He wanted to join a winning culture after finally getting the chance to experience one during his final year in Washington.

“The NFL is already hard enough. You know what I mean? Nobody wants to go to work for an organization where guys are only showing up for paychecks. Don’t even worry about personal numbers and the culture, just not really what it needs to be to win. I mean, it’s hard to win without it. When I talked to coach [Kevin] O’Connell, coach [Brian] Flores, and all those guys over there in Minnesota, it really felt like they were building something special, and I just wanted to be a part of that.”

Jonathan Allen

The first part of this statement is telling. Allen was speaking from experience.

It represented a window into how things went for the Commanders before 2024. He toiled through abject misery on poorly constructed teams with inept leadership. Allen’s frustrations threatened to boil over on several occasions, but the energy was restored quickly by Quinn.


Commanders Wire

One draft analyst feels Georgia’s Jalon Walker might not be used properly by many coaches, but trusts Commanders’ Dan Quinn if gets Walker.


Sportsocracy draft analyst Jeremy Greene pointed to Micah Parsons, whom Quinn did not restrict to one position, allowing Quinn to use Parsons in ways that best fit his athletic ability. Greene, a guest on the “Take Command” podcast with Logan Paulsen and Craig Hoffman, explained his thinking Thursday.

“I look at Jalon Walker and go, ‘in the wrong scenario you are going to get completely washed out’. If what you think you are going to do with him is put him in the middle of a 3-4, and then set him as an edge rusher in Nickel, which I think several teams would use him for, if that’s how you are evaluating him, he’s a TWO (Round 2).”

“If he’s almost a hybrid, doesn’t really have a position, look, we are getting more positionless as time goes on, that’s where we are. There are guys that come into this league and just don’t have a position. Jalon Walker does not have a position. But he does do certain things particularly well.”

“I don’t trust a lot of coaches to get the most out of him. But I had a lot of these questions when Micah Parsons came out too...He wasn’t this ready-made prospect...”I like the fact that Dan Quinn has had to work through that. In terms of raw talent I would say Jalon Walker is a top-15 talent. But then there is a reduction if he is an off-ball linebacker. There is a reduction because I think he is a little undersized to be a natural edge.”

So, you start peeling the onion back and you realize he is going to fall if he doesn’t go to Carolina at 8, because Carolina allegedly really likes him. If Jalon Walker doesn’t go at 8, I couldn’t tell you a team between 9 and 29 that really makes all that much sense.”

Paulsen then echoed Greene, citing that “Walker has 31-inch arms, he is not going to always play edge, and he is too stiff to play off-ball linebacker. He is going to take a tumble,” agreed Paulsen. “In this era of positionless football, I think he would be perfect for what Dan (Quinn) wants to do. He has the potential to be this pass-rush specialist. I think he is better off the edge. I think he’s got better feel, better bend, and more raw horsepower to get there. So, I think that would be a tremendous fit.”


Podcasts & videos

GM Adam Peters & Shawn Springs on the 2025 NFL Draft | Get Loud | Washington Commanders | NFL​



Episode 1,043 - Guest: @PFF_Macri. Deep dive on edge defenders in 2025 NFL Draft. Which top guys might fall to Commanders at 29? Analysis of Mike Green, James Pearce, Mykel Williams & more. Also, more important in current NFL - pass rush or pass coverage?https://t.co/Jy6OMZseQq

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) April 4, 2025


Take Command, Take 2! For the second straight day, Craig Hoffman had a Take Command segment where he, Logan, and Jeremy Greene talked top CBs in the draft! https://t.co/p6RP60rjNZ pic.twitter.com/LgZ4RWOaTc

— The Team 980 (@team980) April 5, 2025

NFC East links

Pro Football Talk

Brian Daboll’s presence at Colorado Pro Day conflicts with comments from earlier in the week


Brian Daboll doesn’t go to Pro Days. Unless he does.

The Giants coach showed up for the Colorado Pro Day on Friday, days after both Daboll and Giants G.M. Joe Schoen said Daboll doesn’t do Pro Days.

He doesn’t go to any pro days,” Schoen said at the annual league meetings in Florida, via Pat Leonard of the New York Daily News.

Daboll was asked on Tuesday whether he’ll be present for the Colorado Pro Day. Said Daboll, per Leonard: “No. Pro day? No.”

With the Giants holding the third pick in the draft, and with Miami quarterback Cam Ward penciled in at No. 1, the Giants are expected to have at least one of the top two Buffaloes prospects on the board at No. 3. The question becomes whether, if the Browns take cornerback/receiver (or receiver/cornerback) Travis Hunter, will the Giants select quarterback Shedeur Sanders?

It’s believed that the Giants wouldn’t take Sanders at No. 3. It’s possible, however, that the Giants could trade down and then hope Sanders remains available at a lower spot.

However it plays out, the Giants have plenty of flexibility at quarterback. Current starter Russell Wilson has only $10.5 million in guaranteed pay. Backup Jameis Winston will make $4 million guaranteed in 2025. Either could be traded, in theory, if Sanders is drafted. Winston could be cut, in theory.

Adding both Wilson and Winston provides flexibility to the Giants at the most important position on the field. Which is a far cry from the desperation they were feeling when, just two weeks ago, the cupboard consisted of freeze-dried cutlets.


NFL league links

Articles​

Front Office Sports

Why Sports Leagues Are Betting Big on Streaming’s Reach


The NFL’s Christmas Day tripleheader shows just how much the league is leaning into streaming, with Netflix and Amazon leading the charge.

Only four years after Prime scored the first exclusive NFL game package with Thursday Night Football, the league is turning to two giant streamers, not linear TV networks, to complete its attempted yuletide takeover from the rival NBA. Despite Netflix passing on a chance to bid for the NFL Draft, it’s also likely the Shield will add a giant streamer like Google/YouTube to its coverage starting in 2026.

It wasn’t that long ago that leagues like the NFL and NBA viewed streaming more as a futures bet. Given the disparity in reach versus linear broadcast and cable TV networks, streaming was seen as the future, not the present. So leagues experimented with live games on streaming platforms to see if they could attract elusive younger viewers—and to prepare for the day when streaming overtook traditional TV.

Now, it feels like the pendulum is swinging. Old-fashioned free over-the-air networks are back en vogue because they reach more than 100 million homes. And leagues are increasingly getting into bed with streamers because they want access to their audiences both in the U.S. and worldwide.

“It’s funny, not long ago people were talking about streamers as presenting a challenge in terms of reach. Now the largest streamers are becoming a reach play. It’s crazy how quickly it changed,” says Sports Media Advisors CEO Doug Perlman.

“Rights sellers like the idea of multiple packages as it helps them by being on a number of different types of platforms as opposed to all of their games on one technology,” Thompson says. “Hence, you have linear OTA and cable, streaming, etc. It’s very important during a time of transition like we are seeing in the media business at this point. As a rights seller, you need to be wherever your fans might be consuming your product.”


The Athletic (paywall)​

Can AFC West’s ‘all-star lineup’ of coaches finally top Andy Reid and the Chiefs?


Welcome to the AFC West, where what’s old — or rich in experience, to put it more politely — is new again.

When Pete Carroll, 73, was hired to become the new head coach of Las Vegas Raiders in January, replacing the fired Antonio Pierce, he raised the average age of the coaches in the division to 65.5 years old. No other NFL division has an average age among its four coaches that even reaches 50. Every boss in the AFC West had already begun his respective coaching career before any head coach in the AFC South — the division with the youngest average age at 40.5 years old — had even reached middle school.

Instead of searching for the next Sean McVay — the Super Bowl-winning coach of the Rams who is still somehow only 39 — the challengers in the AFC West have instead opted for something closer to Reid, at least as it relates to experience. Though the Chiefs went 15-2 last season before ultimately being blown out in Super Bowl LIX by the Philadelphia Eagles, there have been signs the gap in the division, thanks to its injection of coaching talent, is shrinking.

The AFC West is now where some of the most experienced coaches in the sport have been invigorated by a new, heady challenge: loosening the iron grip 67-year-old Andy Reid and the Chiefs have held on the division for most of the last decade. Perhaps the most vibrant illustration of the dominance: Kansas City has collected more AFC West titles since 2016 (nine) than division game losses (eight).

That makes 2025 different in the AFC West. Not only has every coach raised the floor of the team they have inherited — Payton and Carroll never won fewer than seven games since 2006; Harbaugh has never had a losing record as an NFL coach — but they also have familiarity with the quarterbacks in their programs. Harbaugh will enter his second season with Pro Bowl QB Justin Herbert, the team’s starter since 2020. The Raiders traded for veteran Geno Smith, who previously started for Carroll in Seattle, a huge upgrade from what Las Vegas had at the position in 2024. Payton will enter his second season with Bo Nix, who is coming off the best season for a rookie quarterback in Broncos history and has already become “one heck of a player,” Reid said.


Discussion topics

The Athletic (paywall)​

What the Premier League can learn from the NFL owners’ meetings


The NFL’s openness stands in contrast to much of the global football ecosystem. The Premier League is probably the closest approximation to the NFL in terms of its relevance and popularity. It has historically had a close relationship with the league and shares several owners. Manchester United co-owner Joel Glazer was in attendance representing the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, as were Arsenal owners Stan and Josh Kroenke (Los Angeles Rams) and Fulham owner Shahid Khan (Jacksonville Jaguars). Co-owner of second-tier side Leeds United, Jed York (San Francisco 49ers), and Crystal Palace co-owner Josh Harris (Washington Commanders) were also there.

Yet, access in the Premier League is limited mostly to managers’ weekly press conferences. Player availability has been reduced dramatically. Executives rarely talk. As The Athletic’s Oliver Kay wrote two years ago, “English football doesn’t really do openness.” Managers stand too often as the lone public voice for clubs.

There are exceptions. As Kay explained, some Premier League club executives do speak to the media, but the culture frowns on those exceptions rather than encouraging them.

“One executive tells the story of how counterparts at other clubs think he is a ‘mug’ for exposing himself to scrutiny in media interviews and question-and-answer sessions with supporters,” Kay wrote. “Another media-friendly executive has been accused of being on an ego trip.”

One can’t help but wonder how the Premier League might benefit from similar types of events and access. At the risk of sounding like Todd Boehly suggesting an all-star game, it’s difficult to argue that the NFL’s approach to engaging media at these sorts of events is misguided.

The league’s popularity is unparalleled in the U.S.. It dominates TV ratings, accounting for 72 of the 100 most watched telecasts in the U.S. in 2024 — a number that was somehow down from 2023. The NFL plans to opt out of its media rights deals, valued at $111 billion over 11 years, because it now sees its product as undervalued, per multiple reports. By contrast, NBC pays the Premier League $450 million per season, while its domestic rights in the UK are valued at $8.4 billion over four years.

The three days in Palm Beach reflected the ease with which the NFL has built a dominant hold over the American sports landscape. What could have been a boring board meeting instead placed the NFL squarely back into the news and firmly in the spotlight five months before its season kicks off and three-and-a-half months before teams open training camp.

The Premier League similarly dominates news cycles, and while it has less competition at home, one can’t help but wonder if the connections and commonalities with the NFL could help to drive some change in the culture around the Premier League and media access, even if it starts on a global front with the league’s popularity in America.

Putting on an event like the NFL’s annual meeting could be a good start.


All aTwitter


Adam peters talking about when he was scouting Jayden and what made him really fall in love with Jayden Daniel’s #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/pgyq8sq9sl

— PAIN (@Xommanders) April 3, 2025


Putting them to the test@Microsoft | #RaiseHail

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 4, 2025

Tress Way, @Commanders P - Is the only qualifying Punter in team history, since 1968, to have a career net average of over 40 yards per punt - 41.5. (Per Pro Football Reference) #HTTC #Commanders #Washington #NFL #NFLDraft2025 #nflfootball pic.twitter.com/4iDtnPbcQw

— Pro Football Hall of Fame Ambassador (@PFHOFAmbassador) April 4, 2025

Deebo’s latest post has two pics of his meals. Buddy hated being called fat lol. pic.twitter.com/vD1ybu8kHF

— Marshall (@MarshW_7) April 4, 2025


As his contract seemed to imply, QB Justin Fields will be the #Jets' starter to open the 2025 NFL season:https://t.co/jaP8dA8UHa

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) April 5, 2025

With Dallas acquiring a new backup QB, Trey Lance has found a new home, signing with the #Chargers:https://t.co/qSY8icKXRi

— Pro Football Rumors (@pfrumors) April 5, 2025

The #Cowboys worked out veteran OL Saahdiq Charles today, source says. The former fourth-round pick of the #Commanders recently came out of retirement after walking away last summer during camp with the #Titans. pic.twitter.com/V9FAudmkxv

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) April 4, 2025

Multiple Cal NIL donors cut off the cash until new G.M. Ron Rivera is given actual control over the football program, like Andrew Luck at Stanford. https://t.co/f7BDFvvSaP

— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) April 4, 2025

Julio Jones has announced his retirement:

◽️ 914 receptions
◽️ 13,703 receiving yards
◽️ 66 receiving TDs
◽️ 7x Pro Bowler
◽️ 2x 1st Team All-Pro

One of the best receivers of his generation calls it a career.pic.twitter.com/L0d5a9808O

— Dianna Russini (@DMRussini) April 4, 2025


Just read The Athletic's consensus draft board. Shedeur Sanders is ranked 32nd. Mind-blowing. All-time laughable. Shedeur has rare accuracy, toughness and feel for playing the hardest position to play in sports. Titans should take him No. 1.

— Skip Bayless (@RealSkipBayless) April 4, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/ms94ntEaNj

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 4, 2025

Just bumped into Commanders guard Sam Cosmi at Capital One Arena. He’s walking the concourse in an Ovi jersey.

The GR8 choice is bringing out the DC sports stars.

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) April 4, 2025

The Gr8 Chase: Alex Ovechkin’s path to the NHL scoring recordhttps://t.co/MmVHe4CYXn

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) April 4, 2025

Wayne Gretzky is in the building to watch Alex Ovechkin's Gr8 Chase❗

ESPN+/Hulu/Disney+ pic.twitter.com/wxVd6EhQpP

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) April 4, 2025

Ovi bows to Wayne. Unreal. pic.twitter.com/BZgdu9yjFO

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) April 5, 2025

8️⃣9️⃣3️⃣ pic.twitter.com/OcJV50SDvg

— x - Washington Capitals (@Capitals) April 4, 2025

BREAKING

Alex Ovechkin scores Goal #894, tying Wayne Gretzky on the NHL's all-time list#ALLCAPS pic.twitter.com/DgsiaOeLqj

— Sportsnet Stats (@SNstats) April 5, 2025

The Blackhawks stay to shake Ovechkin’s hand pic.twitter.com/YxaPleGfeF

— Sammi Silber (@sammisilber) April 5, 2025

Caps win 5-3 over Chicago and Alex Ovechkin has tied Wayne Gretzky with 894 career goals. He'll have the chance to break the record on Sunday on Long Island

— Ethan Cadeaux (@Ethan_Cadeaux) April 5, 2025

#Caps HC Spencer Carbery confirms that Alex Ovechkin did NOT want to score 895 and break Gretzky's record into an empty net. Hence why he was on bench for Leonard's ENG and came out after. @team980 pic.twitter.com/X1KEuQ8HQ9

— Chris Russell AKA the ! (@Russellmania621) April 5, 2025

"HISTORY, BABE!"
"HISTORY, BABE!"#Gr8Chase pic.twitter.com/jxmemZm98d

— x - Washington Capitals (@Capitals) April 5, 2025

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/5/...scoring-record-on-friday-night-at-capital-one
 
Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan Has Size, But Can the Commanders Refine His Skills?

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: SEP 14 Oregon at Oregon State

Photo by Brian Murphy/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan, OT, Oregon State
School:
Oregon State University | Conference: Pacific-12
College Experience: Redshirt Senior | Age: 23 (Week 1)
Height / Weight: 6’8” 315 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 6th round-undrafted

Player Comparison: Brandon Parker

Player Overview


Graduating from Davis HS (CA) as a three-star prospect, Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan started his collegiate career with the University of Colorado. After redshirting his 2020 season, he started the 2021-23 seasons with the Buffaloes primarily at LT. After a maligned 2023 season, he followed his offensive line coach to Oregon State in 2024 where Gerad rebuilt his reputation. He was considered the top offensive lineman in the PAC-12 conference playing over 800 snaps at left tackle. He was part of an offensive unit that accumulated nearly 190 rushing yards per game and was only responsible for a single penalty and 2-3 sacks. He was invited to participate in the East-West Shrine Game.

Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan is a tall, lean built tackle and good length. He uses his frame and mobility well to mirror pass rushers and put himself between defenders and create rushing lanes. He uses his feet well to sustain blocks and climbs to the second level. Gerad is able to latch on quickly to a rusher and disable their punches with a hard chop. Even with Gerad’s improvements, he still tends to rely on his size rather than skill to win battles. He finds himself leaning into run blocks rather than fully using his arms. He needs work with his arm placement that leaves his chest too open to be abused. He is also widely considered a developmental prospect who needs to work on the technical aspects to pair with his physical attributes. He worked well in a quick hitting/RPO/play action, zone-based scheme. Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan is a late Day 3 prospect for a team who feels confident in their player development.


The Commanders have a top 30 visit scheduled with Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan, OT, Oregon State.

- via several sources.

— Ken Johannesen (@BurgundyBurner) March 22, 2025

Awards & Accomplishments

  • East-West Shrine Participant (2025)
  • Pac-12 Offensive Lineman of the Week (2023)

Metrics



Source: pff.com

Source: pff.com

Strengths

  • Lean, well-built frame coupled with desired arm length.
  • Latches onto defenders and can mirror or drive them.
  • Good footwork and can climb to the second-level.
  • Patient, not too willing to overreact.
  • Good knee bend for his height.

Weaknesses

  • Over-reliant on his size.
  • Arm placement too wide, gives up his chest.
  • Needs better hand placement and timing.
  • Needs to improve at recovering and anchoring.
  • Only one good season, his last season.
  • Tends to lean into his blocks.

Let’s See His Work


Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan is number #71


Excellent recovery by Oregon State OT Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan against Syracuse DE Fadil Diggs' spin move here. #ShrineBowl #NFL #NFLDraft pic.twitter.com/1QMhGS1T7g

— Matt Wilson (@CoachWilson66) January 25, 2025

Interview

How does he fit on the team


Just as important as finding the right combination of offensive linemen to start is the depth behind them. Swing tackle Cornelius Lucas, who served a crucial role for offensive protection, departed this offseason. Adding Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan would bring more competition to the reserve tackle role with Trenton Scott. His size and length alone can make him a decent blocker on special teams. In the unfortunate case of an injured tackle, Gerad can fill in as a reserve coming from an offense with some similar concepts to offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury's. Gerad’s upside is dependent on the developmental tutelage of offensive line coach Bobby Johnson to work on his arm placement, timing, and other technical aspects. But, Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan shows you can’t teach size and the front office is willing to consider adding a big body to the offensive line room.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/7/...n-the-washington-commanders-refine-his-skills
 
Daily Slop - 7 Apr 25 - Commanders draft prospects: corners, edge rushers, and one “perfect fit” running back

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

Bullock’s Film Room (subscription)​

NFL Draft Profile: RB TreVeyon Henderson


Many fans want to see the Commanders draft a running back to replace Brian Robinson as the main back, others want to see a more explosive piece to complement Robinson as a change of pace back and long term successor to Austin Ekeler. Fortunately, there is a deep draft full of quality running backs that can fill any sort of role you’re looking for. This week, I’m going to be looking at a few of those running back prospects, starting with the one I’ve seen most linked to Washington and the one that Commanders fans seem to love and talk about most.

Ohio State running back TreVeyon Henderson might be the perfect fit for the Washington Commanders as a change of pace running back and long term replacement for Austin Ekeler. Measuring in at 5-foot-10, 202 pounds, Henderson is a compact but explosive athlete with 4.43 40-yard dash speed. That speed makes him a home run threat, someone that is capable of breaking off a huge run and scoring from any position on the field.

With Hendersons speed and explosiveness, he’s always looking to find ways to rip off a long run. Sometimes that’s from bouncing his run outside, other times it comes from hitting runs to the back side.


Commanders Wire

Commanders to host intriguing linebacker prospect on local pro day


All 32 NFL teams will hold a local pro day for NFL prospects who are either from the surrounding area or played college football in the area. The Washington Commanders are expected to host their local pro day sometime next week, two weeks before the 2025 NFL draft.

While we don’t have a complete list of players expected to attend, we know one name. According to Ryan Fowler of The Draft Network, Syracuse linebacker Marlowe Wax will attend Washington’s local pro day. In addition to the Commanders’ local pro day, Wax will also participate in local pro days for the Baltimore Ravens and Buffalo Bills.


Commanders invite record-setting punter to local pro day https://t.co/LdS3Y3uFv8 pic.twitter.com/Ygjv1n29O7

— Commanders Wire (@Washington_Wire) April 7, 2025

ESPN

How Ray Lewis and a prayer led TJ Maguranyanga to the Washington Commanders


Maguranyanga, who has converted to Edge Rusher, told ESPN of the origins of his interest in American football: “It started when I was a bit younger, just watching Ray Lewis and the Ravens.

“I found them pretty inspirational - just the physical side of the game - so I’d watch hyper videos of Ray Lewis before I played rugby games. That’s where it all started.”

While many NFL IPP and NFL Academy talents did not know the sport before they started playing it, Maguranyanga always held onto what seemed a distant dream of playing in the league.

He said: “Last year, when the documentary came out for the IPP, I’d been watching it a lot and hoping that this was what I was going to be able to do. From the time I was quite young, I was a bit delusional - thinking that I was going to be a two-sport athlete.

“I was going to play professional rugby and then switch to play American football. That had always been my dream.

“I drew up an email, but I decided not to send it. I just prayed about it. I was like: ‘If this is part of God’s plan for me, then somewhere in the future, the NFL will contact me.’”

His prayers were seemingly answered soon afterwards. He was approached to set up IPP trials the day after his season with Clermont ended last season. Some of the skills he learned in rugby, he took into his training for the Edge rusher positions.

Maguranyanga, who played on the wing, much like a running back combined with a wide receiver, explained: “Being able to track defenders and get off the line of scrimmage very quickly - those are things that translate very well between the two sports - just as well as the size and athleticism.

“We’ve got guys who are coming from playing against big guys in rugby and it will just be the same as American football.”

However, there are some adaptations he has had to make: “There’s a lot more cutting and change of direction in football and I’ll be running at a much lower height.

“In rugby, we can pretty much run upright and get into contact, but in football, you want to keep everything pretty low and compact.”

Maguranyanga will have to compete fiercely for [a roster spot] in a sport he has little experience in. However, being from a family that is effectively sporting royalty in Zimbabwe, he is receiving nothing but encouragement back home.

It is unlikely that he will play any significant role for the Commanders early on, but given Mailata’s Super Bowl success with the Eagles in 2025, the NFL IPP’s rugby converts can now so - more than ever - dare to dream.


Commanders Wire

Is there a cornerback that would be good value for the Commanders at No. 29?


Here are some of the thoughts that [Jeremy] Greene offered last week regarding some of the corners believed to be in the top tier of mock drafts.

  • Shavon Revel (6-3, 193, East Carolina), who Greene said is more of a read-and-react zone coverage corner. “I love Revel, he is in my top 20 overall. The medical on him is going to be fine, it was a clean tear. But I do like him better in zone.”
  • “I love Trey Amos (6-1, 190, Ole Miss) if you are looking for someone that is going to play up in your face. Trey Amos plays like he is trying to get somebody in his family to tell him they are proud of him. He wants to get in everybody’s face. He is hyper aggressive...I love Trey Amos.”
  • “If you are looking for somebody in the middle to late three, maybe even into four (round), Nohl Williams (6-1, 200, California). Williams has that aggressive, get into your face, aggressive, press man, really good with his hands, not super fast which I think will push him down.”
  • “I’m in like, not love with Azareye’h Thomas (6-2, 198, Florida State). Look, I’m a Florida State guy. I can just tell you, I kept seeing him in the first round (mock drafts) going, ‘Don’t do that, don’t do that, you won’t like how that goes...He’s a bully corner that unfortunately is not all that fast.”
  • Benjamin Morrison (6-0, 190, Notre Dame) “I love the player. But the injuries scare the heaper jeapers out of me. That hip makes me super nervous. He had the hip procedure during the season. He had another procedure after the season, and no one will tell me what it was. I have a second round grade on Morrison.”

Podcasts & videos


I highly recommend this John Keim podcast, which is almost entirely an in-depth interview with Commanders holder/punter Tress Way


Talked to Tress Way about: what Adam Peters and Dan Quinn told him that made him tear up; his adopted son’s heart surgery during the playoffs; retirement; his family’s competitive spirit and more. @ESPNRichmond https://t.co/ymOYus3Q8I

— John Keim (@john_keim) April 7, 2025


Episode 1,044 - A truly special weekend in Washington, D.C.-sports history. Alex Ovechkin becomes the NHL's all-time goal king. Reaction, analysis & appreciation. Also, is he the greatest D.C. athlete ever? I discuss Ovi vs. Sammy Baugh vs. Walter Johnson.https://t.co/3DhuAh1hJb

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) April 7, 2025


NEW POD

Commanders NFL Draft Pick-by-Pick preview #RaiseHail
Dream scenarios
Realistic options
Offseason practice dates announced

Youtube: https://t.co/XOLsAYKCro

Other Platforms: https://t.co/ELr4rNLNjf pic.twitter.com/P6Ih4UyLtB

— Mason Kinnahan (@Mason_Kinnahan) April 7, 2025

NFC East links

Big Blue View

How successful are quarterbacks drafted in Round 1?


Here are the numbers since 2010, and they are not encouraging

Below, you will find a year-by-year list of quarterbacks drafted in Round 1 since 2010. There have been 49. Bill Barnwell of ESPN did a historical look of his own at quarterback hits and misses in the draft in 2024 and provided a tiered grading system for breaking down the success or failure level of each pick.

I liked it and have adopted it, with my own judgment for which category each selected quarterback falls into.

I am including quarterbacks from the 2023 and 2024 draft classes, although there isn’t a big enough body of work to make definitive judgments on those players. That adds an “incomplete” category for several quarterbacks. Consider where I have them listed the 2023 and 2024 draftees as “for now” placements.

By the way, I dropped Daniel Jones from the “solid starter” category to the “low-end pro careers” category.

2024

No. 1 — Caleb Williams (Chicago Bears)

No. 2 — Jayden Daniels (Washington Commanders)

No. 3 — Drake Maye (New England Patriots)

No. 8 — Michael Penix (Atlanta Falcons)

No. 10 — J.J. McCarthy (Minnesota Vikings)

No. 12 — Bo Nix (Denver Broncos)

  • Future Hall of Famers: 0
  • Franchise QBs: 1 (Daniels)
  • Solid starters: 2 (Maye, Nix)
  • Low-end pro careers: 0
  • Disappointments: 0

Incomplete: (Williams, Penix, McCarthy ... I need to see Williams in a better situation before even beginning to pass judgment)

Totals​

  • Future Hall of Famers: 3
  • Franchise QBs: 9
  • Solid starters: 7
  • Low-end pro careers: 7
  • Disappointments: 18
  • Incomplete: 5

That’s 19 out of 49 drafted quarterbacks currently in the ‘solid starter’ or above category, a hit rate of 38.8%. If you are looking for Hall of Fame or absolute franchise quarterback as your standard, that’s 12 of 49, or 24.5%. Take out the five incompletes, those percentages are 44.1 and 27.2.

The disappointments category has 18 names or 36.7%. Combine that with the seven quarterbacks in the ‘low-end’ category and that is 51% who did not or have not yet given teams what they hoped to get out of a first-round quarterback.

This means the historical expectation would be that if three quarterbacks are taken in Round 1, only one will have a career justifying the draft capital used on them. Two if teams are lucky.


NFL league links

Articles​

NFL.com

Bears, Patriots, Jets open voluntary offseason programs today


Day 1 of the voluntary offseason program kicks off Monday for the Chicago Bears, New England Patriots and New York Jets.

Teams with new head coaches get an early start on their offseason programs to immerse players in the systems and get to know their new staff. In 2025, there are seven clubs with new head coaches.

The Jacksonville Jaguars and Las Vegas Raiders begin their offseason program tomorrow, April 8. The Dallas Cowboys and New Orleans Saints will wait a week, kicking off on April 14.

The rest of the league is eligible to begin their program on April 21.

Activities during this phase are limited to meetings, strength and conditioning, and physical rehabilitation only.

Repetition for effect: This phase is voluntary.


NFL.com

Raiders releasing CB Jack Jones after attempting to trade him


Jones was originally drafted by the Patriots in the fourth round of the 2022 NFL Draft but only played just over a season in New England. He showcased his talents as a ballhawk in his rookie campaign, snagging a pair of interceptions and six passes defensed, but on- and off-the-field behavior, including an arrest in June of 2023, culminated in the Patriots waiving him five games into his sophomore season.

He was picked up by the Raiders, then led by at-the-time interim head coach Antonio Pierce, who was also Jones’ high school HC at Long Beach Poly. In 19 starts over one-plus seasons in Las Vegas, Jones accumulated five interceptions, three returned for touchdowns, as well as 20 passes defensed and 94 tackles.

But with the regime change in Las Vegas and Pete Carroll coming in as coach after Pierce’s firing, Jones is evidently no longer in the Raiders’ plan. He will now enter free agency looking for a CB-needy team with whom he can start his next chapter.


Discussion topics

ESPN

2025 NFL draft edge rusher projections: Rankings, comps

3. Mike Green, Marshall​

  • SackSEER projection: 23.9 sacks through five NFL seasons
  • Scouts Inc. ranking: 21
  • Similar historical prospects: Damontre Moore, Aidan Hutchinson

Green started out at Virginia and then transferred to Marshall, where he led the FBS with 17 sacks and 23 tackles for loss last season. He has both speed and power moves, plus he’s another former off-ball linebacker, so teams can occasionally drop him into coverage. At his pro day, Green chose to run the three-cone drill and shuttle but did no other workouts, which was very unusual. Perhaps Green knew to focus on what he did best because his three-cone time of 6.85 seconds was the fastest in this year’s edge rusher class and among the top times for all edge rushers in SackSEER’s database. For other workouts, we had to use projections based on weight.

It is difficult to predict the future success of college players. That’s why the two most similar prospects to Green are Moore, who finished his NFL career with 11 sacks, and Hutchinson, who might be the best edge rusher in the game today other than Myles Garrett. Projections are hard.

4. Donovan Ezeiruaku, Boston College​

  • SackSEER Projection: 19.9 sacks through five NFL seasons
  • Scouts Inc. ranking: 26
  • Similar historical prospects: Anthony Barr, Jerry Hughes

Ezeiruaku ranked second in this class with a time of 6.94 seconds in the three-cone drill, and he was also second in the FBS with 16.5 sacks in 2024. Sports Info Solutions charting had him with 69 pressures in just 12 games last season, which led the nation as well. He’s somewhat undersized for an edge rusher (6-foot-3, 248 pounds) but has a high motor and long arms.

5. Mykel Williams, Georgia​

  • SackSEER projection: 19.6 sacks through five NFL seasons
  • Scouts Inc. ranking: 13
  • Similar historical prospects: Jerome McDougle, Shaq Lawson

Here is the first-round edge rusher most likely to bust, according to SackSEER. Williams certainly had better college production than Stewart, but 14 sacks over three years as a starter is not terribly impressive. Neither is a total of just four passes defensed. And Williams, unlike Stewart, does not have the workout numbers to counter his underwhelming collegiate production.

Williams didn’t do a vertical jump, a broad jump or a three-cone. He ran a mediocre 40 of 4.73 seconds at his pro day, but there should be an asterisk there because he has been rehabbing from an ankle injury. In fact, that injury also might explain why Williams had only 5.0 sacks as a junior because he said he struggled with it all season. So there’s bust potential here, but there’s also good reason to believe he will beat his SackSEER projection.

6. James Pearce Jr., Tennessee​

  • SackSEER projection: 19.3 sacks through five NFL seasons
  • Scouts Inc. ranking: 27
  • Similar historical prospects: Clay Matthews, David Ojabo

Pearce had the best 40 time of any edge rusher at the combine, 4.47 seconds. That gives him a strong explosion index, although his 31-inch vertical jump was not great. Pearce led the SEC with 10 sacks in 2023, but he dropped off to 7.5 sacks in 2024. He’s an explosive speed rusher who also gets high marks against the run.


All aTwitter


Of my top 32 prospects, only 13 qualified for RAS this year.

Lack of testing is going to change evaluating--maybe not in the worst way, either. Back to the tape.

— Matt Miller (@nfldraftscout) April 7, 2025


“Everybody I bounced that off of, they go, oh God, please please don't let that happen!”@dameshek on what he’s heard from Steelers fans in Pittsburgh about signing Aaron Rodgers: pic.twitter.com/m8m3jZNbKd

— Ross Tucker Podcast (@RossTuckerPod) April 6, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/9ec7uHd6cU

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 6, 2025

Joe Beninati and Craig Laughlin have been broadcasting together for nearly 30 years.

The duo has called Alex Ovechkin’s entire career since he entered the league in 2005.

They were in the booth for Ovi’s first goal—and his record-breaking 895th goal. pic.twitter.com/CSGnRmrfRE

— Front Office Sports (@FOS) April 6, 2025

Alex Ovechkin broke Wayne Gretzky’s record playing in the same amount of games: pic.twitter.com/IECNHLZvDZ

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) April 6, 2025

Wayne Gretzky knew even back in the day his record would one day be broken pic.twitter.com/JT7BkZbxek

— Spittin' Chiclets (@spittinchiclets) April 6, 2025

The fear was Alex Ovechkin would break the record while a washed-up player on a bad team. He has instead done this in a 40-goal season for the top team in the Eastern Conference - and in his age-39 season in which he missed 16 games due to a broken left fibula. All-time legend.

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) April 6, 2025

Legend @ovi8 x @JayD__5 pic.twitter.com/b2modonYuC

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 6, 2025

Wayne Gretzky is now one goal away from tying Alex Ovechkin’s goal record pic.twitter.com/d37GvDVjBb

— Jersey Nerds (@The_JerseyNerds) April 6, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/7/...edge-rushers-and-one-perfect-fit-running-back
 
Daily Slop - 8 Apr 25 - Wes Welker joins former Texas Tech teammate Kliff Kingsbury on Commanders staff

North Texas v Texas Tech

Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

Washington Post (paywall)​

Former Pro Bowl wide receiver Wes Welker to join Commanders’ staff


The receiver-turned-coach will work in both personnel and coaching in Washington.

Former Pro Bowl wide receiver Wes Welker will join the team as a personnel analyst, working with both the personnel and coaching staffs, according to two people with knowledge of the hire. He will start around the time the Commanders’ offseason program begins April 22, one of those people said.

Welker’s familiarity in Washington starts at the top and runs deep. General Manager Adam Peters worked in personnel for the Patriots and Denver Broncos during Welker’s stints with both organizations as a player. The two reunited in San Francisco, where Peters was the 49ers’ vice president of player personnel and later their assistant GM, while Welker coached the wideouts. Among those receivers was Deebo Samuel, whom the Commanders acquired in exchange for a fifth-round draft pick last month.

Welker was also college teammates with Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury, Texas Tech’s second all-time leader in passing yards. Welker was Kingsbury’s leading receiver in 2002 with 1,054 yards.

Welker also was teammates with Washington special teams coordinator Larry Izzo, a former linebacker, in New England in 2007 and 2008.

Welker is expected to work closely with Peters’s personnel staff, including assistant GM Lance Newmark and director of player personnel David Blackburn, as well as with Dan Quinn’s coaching staff.


Commanders Wire

Commanders hiring of Wes Welker reunites him with familiar faces


In addition to Samuel, second-year wideout Luke McCaffrey stands the most to benefit from Welker’s presence. The Commanders believe in McCaffrey. While he didn’t put up huge numbers as a rookie, he did get open. They want him to take the next step in 2025, and Welker could help get him there.


Commanders.com

Commanders culture shift keeps core foundation together


Players like Ertz, Way, linebacker Bobby Wagner and quarterback Marcus Mariota all had multiple options for where they could go next in their careers. Wagner and Mariota both proved they could still be valuable members of a roster in different ways; Wagner had another 100-tackle season and became one of the team’s key leaders, while Mariota provided mentorship for quarterback Jayden Daniels and played well in relief for the rookie.

Mariota was willing to hear teams out about opportunities, but any potential deal would have to “knock my socks off,” he said, because of what he had in Washington, which offered the chance to be around a coaching staff he liked as well as one of the most exciting young players in the league. He had built a good rapport with Daniels and the staff, and he’s been around the NFL long enough to know that it’s not a guarantee he could replicate that with another team.

“At the end of the day, the grass isn’t always greener,” Mariota said. “...You understand that when you have a good thing, and you have a good culture, and you have a great room, that’s not everywhere.”

It was more than just opportunity that brought Wagner back to the Commanders, too. As someone who has now started for multiple organizations, Wagner has already proven that he can play well in any system. Although his Hall of Fame resume gets more solid every year he gets to triple digits in stops, there’s not much more he can do to convince people that he’s one of the best defenders in league history.

But Wagner didn’t even let the situation get to the point where he would have to consider other teams. He views Washington as “the place” and wanted to remain where he felt he was accepted and appreciated.

The Commanders were once again active in free agency this offseason, signing a list of 24 players that includes nine new faces, along with trades for Laremy Tunsil and Deebo Samuel, all excited to join the team’s new culture. The situation is a bit different from last year, though, because rather than selling hope, Quinn and Peters have tangible proof that their system works.

And the word is out; Washington is one of the best places to be in the NFL right now, and players are eager to help write the next chapter in the team’s history.


Commanders.com

Nick Emmanwori could be ‘menace’ for Commanders defense


The opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of the team.

This week, we’re staying on the defensive side of the ball and looking at a safety prospect that ESPN’s Field Yates believes could be a good fit for Washington.

South Carolina’s Nick Emmanwori is one of the best safety prospects in this year’s draft class, and depending on which draft analyst you follow, NFL teams couldn’t ask for a better prospect at the position. He’s physical, a willing participant in run support and freakishly athletic. If some of that sounds like it’s been ripped from Chinn’s skill set, you’re not alone; NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein proclaimed in his draft profile of Emmanwori that his best comparison is the 2020 second-round pick.

Safety is not a glaring need like other positions on the Commanders’ roster, but the work general manager Adam Peters has done in free agency gives them some leniency to take the best player available at No. 29 overall. Yates believes that will be Emmanwori if he falls to them.

Emmanwori certainly has enough athleticism to be a versatile piece in the secondary if that were what Quinn and the defensive staff wanted to do with him. He ran a 4.38 40-yard dash — the second-fastest among safeties — and had the best vertical jump (43 inches) and broad jump (11-foot-6) of anyone in the class. NextGenStats gave him the best production and athleticism scores for a safety, and his Relative Athletic Score (RAS) is a perfect 10, ranking him first for his position since 1987.

But it isn’t just that Emmanwori has an abundance of traits; how he uses them makes him one of the draft’s most productive prospects, regardless of position. His highlights are filled with plays of him breaking on routes for interceptions and delivering hits near the line of scrimmage in the run game. He led South Carolina with 88 stops in 2024 and earned First Team All-American honors from several media outlets because of it.




Podcasts & videos

How Dan Quinn Revived The Commanders | Full Interview​


Another outstanding long-form one-on-one offseason interview. I found the discussion of special teams that starts a bit before the 40:00 mark to be especially interesting.



@BruceFeldmanCFB returns for "Mock Draft Monday" with his new first-rounder based on college and pro sources. Ward and Sanders. Jeanty, Hampton, Henderson.. Green, Ezeiruaku, Pearce and Scourton. Revel and Thomas. Receivers. Fits for Commanders. More. https://t.co/LQE9s7rwNw

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) April 7, 2025

NFC East links

Blogging the Boys

4 Cowboys with a lot to lose in upcoming draft


The draft is going to change a lot about the Cowboys.

CBs Trevon Diggs and DaRon Bland​


It is widely projected that Dallas will target a cornerback early in this draft, even as high as the first round. The higher the investment, the more likely it is that the Cowboys are preparing to move from one of their high-profile veterans.

Diggs is coming off two tough years wrecked by his 2023 injury. After his 11-interception season in 2021, he remained an excellent overall corner but then got injured in Week 2 of the 2023 season. While he did return to play in 11 games last year, Diggs was clearly still not all the way back. There was also talk that the team was not happy with how he approached his medical care and rehab, potentially limiting him in 2025 as well.

Bland also just had a down year following a training camp foot injury. His record-breaking performance in 2023 with five touchdowns off interceptions was far from duplicated; no turnovers of any kind in the seven games he played last season. But Bland did look better in coverage by the end of the year, leaving hope that he can get back to his previous form.

The big difference between these two is where they are in their contracts. Diggs has four years left on the large deal he signed after 2022, while Bland is entering the final year of just his rookie contract. After this year, Diggs can be released for over $12 million in cap savings and Bland becomes an unrestricted free agent.


NFL league links

Articles​

Front Office Sports

Goodell’s Influence Faces Test As NFL Mulls Tush Push Ban, Reseeding


Two big proposed rule shifts were tabled at last week’s NFL annual meeting, but they will soon resurface with support from league commissioner Roger Goodell.

A possible Tush Push ban dominated chatter at last week’s NFL annual meeting, due in no small part to the Eagles’ perfection of the accentuated quarterback sneak en route to a Super Bowl LIX triumph. Owners are said to be split evenly on the issue. While opposition to the play has centered in large part on player safety concerns, no actual injuries were recorded last year from Tush Pushes. Instead, the real objection lies closer to aesthetic issues and a perceived similarity to a rugby play.

“I think there are safety issues that are being considered in that case,” Goodell said last week. “We have very little data from it, but it’s beyond data. There’s also the mechanism of the injury that we study, that type of thing, that leads us to show the risk involved with a particular play or a particular tackle.”

Goodell hinted at considering a return to pre-2004 rules, when players were not allowed to push or pull a ballcarrier.

The playoff seeding issue, meanwhile, carries many more economic implications, as it would potentially remove a guaranteed home game in the postseason for a division winner. One possible middle ground is a requirement to have a winning record in the regular season to get a home playoff game. The goal with the proposed switch would be to heighten the importance and appeal of late regular-season games.


Discussion topics

Pro Football Focus

2025 NFL Draft: 5 prospects who could be surprise first-round picks

CB Trey Amos, Ole Miss

Mock Draft Sim ADP: 41.9


Amos has long been a fringe top-32 player on the PFF big board. His adequate height and length for the position are boosted by a 79th-percentile wingspan. That allows him to comfortably play in press-man coverage, but his work this past year in zone was also impressive with more playing time. He earned a career-high 85.9 PFF coverage grade in 2024 and did not record a season-long PFF coverage grade below 75.0 in the past four years. He also uses those long arms to his advantage, recording a forced incompletion percentage above 20.0% in each of the past three seasons.

The Ole Miss product’s body type and data points suggest he can be a scheme-versatile CB2 to start his career with the potential to develop into a CB1. With as valuable as consistent cornerback work is in the NFL, that should be worth putting him in the first-round conversation.

RB Kaleb Johnson, Iowa

Mock Draft Sim ADP: 59.9


Johnson didn’t quite have the athletic showing at the NFL Scouting Combine some expected, but his name still sneakily carries first-round potential simply because his tape at Iowa shows that there aren’t many running backs with his combination of size and speed.

Johnson’s height (6-foot-1), weight (224 pounds), wingspan (78 1/2 inches) and hand size (9 5/8 inches) were all above the 78th percentile for the position. His 4.57-second 40-yard dash placed him in just the 46th percentile, but weight-adjusting that score makes it just fine. Still, some were expecting more, and because of that, his stock seemed to cool.

But make no mistake, this is a big, explosive back who, behind a zone-heavy blocking scheme, could be a 1,000-yard back early in his rookie contract. Teams such as the Broncos and Steelers (teams that ran a heavy amount of zone in 2024) could at least consider him on Day 1. The Commanders, who deploy more of an even split between zone and man/gap run blocking, are also an intriguing landing spot.

EDGE Bradyn Swinson, LSU

Mock Draft Sim ADP: 52.2


Swinson wasn’t a high-profile name when people really started to turn their attention to the 2025 NFL Draft, so his being a “riser” is more of a product of people getting around to his evaluation (the same is true for me).

Since watching Swinson, I can’t help but feel some teams will at least consider him in the first round. He earned a 90.3 PFF pass-rush grade in 2024 and earned PFF pass-rush grades above 79.5 in each of the past three seasons, dating back to his time at Oregon before becoming a starter at LSU. His 22.2% pass-rush win rate was one of the highest in college football last season, and on a high volume of pass rush pass-rush snaps (313).

He didn’t do much at the NFL Scouting Combine, but his three-cone and short shuttle numbers were both above the 65th percentile, showcasing his flexibility to bend and corner as a speed rusher. His burst and hand speed are also pluses in his game as a 3-4 outside linebacker edge rusher. The league is always looking to take chances on guys who can get after the quarterback at the rate that Swinson does.


All aTwitter


Source confirms Wes Welker will join Commanders staff, serving as personnel analyst. He’ll be working with both the personnel staff and coaching staff.

— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) April 7, 2025

Wes Welker as 49ers WRs coach (2019-21) was the Niners' Deebo Samuel whisperer. Washington hiring Welker for a newly-created role is another example of the team's commitments to spending on infrastructure & maximizing player performance under Josh Harris, Adam Peters & Dan Quinn.

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) April 7, 2025

The #Commanders are hiring Wes Welker to join Dan Quinn’s coaching staff, per @MikeReiss.

Welker was the Dolphins’ WRs coach from 2022–2024 and previously held the same role in San Francisco from 2019–2021, where he worked with Deebo Samuel (who is now in Washington). pic.twitter.com/axR0fByVUa

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) April 7, 2025

Wes Welker joining Kliff Kingsbury's staff is a full circle deal. Here they are 20+ years ago in Lubbock. pic.twitter.com/TVm0XRNR9V

— Peter Schrager (@PSchrags) April 7, 2025


Travis Hunter says he can play every snap in an NFL game if given the chance.

How does he have the time to prepare and attend all the meetings needed?

“We got 24 hours in a day. We sleep for 8 of those. So we got 16 more dedicated to that.”

Love this.pic.twitter.com/uLyxBypmkH

— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) April 7, 2025

The Seahawks offered Geno Smith a contract. He told @AlbertBreer that his representatives didn't make a counter; Seattle's year-to-year structure was one of the biggest issues. https://t.co/NdoEn0WO0z

— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) April 8, 2025

Heartbreaking: Former Eagles star safety CJ Gardner-Johnson on being traded from Philadelphia:

“People showed me their true colors when I got traded.”

CJ has been staying offline as a result of this pic.twitter.com/4HCe04hglk

— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) April 8, 2025


In celebration of Alex Ovechkin becoming the leading @NHL goal scorer, here is a progressive timeline that I created of the goals leaders throughout NHL history!

Check out many of the hockey greats featured in the graphic below ⬇️ #Gr8tness pic.twitter.com/DvYrFfbylU

— Greg Harvey (@BetweenTheNums) April 6, 2025

YOUR 2025 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS. pic.twitter.com/cFxOQ4NnJt

— Florida Gators Men’s Basketball (@GatorsMBK) April 8, 2025

I stand corrected - Houston's last 4 possessions:

1:21 - Joseph Tugler turnover
0:52 - L.J. Cryer turnover
0:26 - Emmanuel Sharp turnover
0:00 - Emmanuel Sharp turnover

gross

— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) April 8, 2025

The moment we won #GoGators pic.twitter.com/mI910kxg0y

— Cameron Magruder (@ScooterMagruder) April 8, 2025

nasty pic.twitter.com/B5RpUm4Yhq

— Dimitri Filipovic (@DimFilipovic) April 8, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/8/...-teammate-kliff-kingsbury-on-commanders-staff
 
Commanders Reacts Survey: predicting 2025 win total and early- and mid-round draft picks

temp_adam_peters.0.jpg


Poll questions!!

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Washington Commanders fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in regular email surveys.



We’re back with another Reacts survey to help fill in the two weeks remaining until the NFL draft.

Today, we have two survey questions.

Question One​


FanDuel has released the over/under marks for all 32 NFL teams. The Commanders number is 9.5 wins. In today’s first question, you simply pick predict whether the team’s win total for 2025 will be over or under 9.5.

Question Two​


The Commanders currently have five draft picks at the end of the month.



Only three of the picks are in the first 200, and the Commanders don’t currently have a third or fifth round pick.

However, in our last Reacts survey, 43% of respondents said that they hoped Adam Peters would trade down from the 29th overall selection to acquire more picks in this draft. Many have also advocated for multiple trade downs by also dealing pick #61 or dealing a potential pick acquired in the hypothetical trade out of the first round.

If Adam Peters trades back one or more times, it’s possible that Washington could have 4 or 5 (or even more!) picks in the first five rounds.

The Commanders currently have 74 players under contract, with 39 offensive players and just 32 defensive players.

The general feeling seems to be that Peters will need to have a defensive focus in the draft, both because of the imbalance in the number of players on each side of the ball (39/32) and because of perceived greater need on defense.

Probably the only three positions that are completely off the board for the Commanders would be quarterback, punter and long snapper.

The general feeling seems to be that the need for a dynamic edge rusher tops the list, while cornerback, free safety, wide receiver, running back and offensive line are also roster position groups that could be bolstered or enhanced in the draft. Even picks at the TE or LB position would not be shocking, and we’ve also seen suggestions that the team could draft a kicker.

Today’s second question, then, comprises a bit of a ‘parlay’ bet structure, as it requires you to mentally forecast (a) how many picks you think the Commanders will actually make in the first five rounds (remembering that they have three now but could potentially add via trade back(s)) and (b) assess how you think the draft will unfold (BPA) or how you think Adam Peters will prioritize his selections (need).

In short, we are asking you, in the second question, to predict how many OFFENSIVE players the Commanders will select in the first 5 rounds of this month’s draft (comprising 176 total picks).

Comments & Results


Speaking of the comments sections, we of course, invite you to answer the survey questions below, but also hope you feel free to expand on your answers and provide nuance in the comments section that follows. I rely on those comments when discussing the results of the survey when they are posted in a separate article in a few days.

POLL QUESTIONS​


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/9/...win-total-and-early-and-mid-round-draft-picks
 
Daily Slop - 9 Apr 25 - 34 prospects attend Commanders’ local pro day on Tuesday ahead of this month’s draft

Penn State v Maryland

Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

Bullock’s Film Room (subscription)​

NFL Draft Profile: RB Omarion Hampton


Recent speculation suggests some teams view Hampton as closer to Jeanty than he’s currently ranked, which could well mean he’s gone long before the Commanders pick at 29. However, if he were to fall to 29, he’d likely be one of the top players available based on talent alone. So in that scenario, would Hampton make sense for the Washington Commanders? Let’s dive into the film to see.

The first thing that stood out to me when I watched Hampton was just how smooth he is. He never looks particularly troubled or panicked, he doesn’t look like one of those guys that has to work incredibly hard to earn every yard they get. Hampton makes things look so much easier than they are because he has such a well-rounded skill set that enables him to do so many different things.

There were many points in that play that it all could have broken down and turned into a negative play or a minimal gain, but at each obstacle he faced, Hampton showed poise and made the correct decision to extend the play and eventually worked his way through the first two levels of the defense. We also saw a good example of his contact balance as he fought through a tackle to gain more yards. That contact balance is one of his best traits and it shows up regularly in key situations to enable him to gain extra yards.


Commanders.com

Javon Kinlaw set to be ‘tone-setter’ for Commanders defense


“He’s explosive,” Peters said at league meetings last week. “He’s a tone-setter. He’s physical. He can line up across the line.”

Kinlaw, a first-round pick from San Francisco in 2020 when Peters was a member of the team’s front office, returned to Washington, D.C., to play for his childhood team on a reported three-year deal. It was one of the few long-term contracts the Commanders gave out this season, as they chose to sign most of their two dozen free agents to one-year deals for the second straight year.

Peters said Kinlaw’s “best football is still ahead of him,” and the Commanders are banking on their belief that they can maximize the physical traits that enticed the 49ers so much when they drafted him. Up to this point in Kinlaw’s career, there have been more flashes, rather than consistent production, for teams to go on. He’s appeared in 58 games over the last five years and recorded 110 tackles and 9.5 sacks with the 49ers and New York Jets.

But as Peters pointed out, outlining Kinlaw’s career requires more context. He only played in four games in 2021 because of a season-ending knee injury. He suffered another knee injury early in the 2022 season and missed 11 games before returning in Week 16. He’s been healthy the last two seasons and appeared in 34 consecutive games.


Commanders Wire

Star safety prospect attends Commanders local pro day


Star Penn State safety Kevin Winston Jr was among the 34 prospects who attended the Commanders’ local pro day on Tuesday.

Winston Jr was a sure lock for the first round of the 2025 NFL draft before partially tearing his ACL in early September. The preseason All-American and team captain was the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week in the first game for the Nittany Lions, and was headed for a monster final season in college. The 21-year-old is still listed as the fourth-best safety in the 2025 draft class by PFF, and a projected top 90 pick in the draft.

The 2024 film was cut short for Winston, but the 2023 resume shows that the former Nittany Lion is an elite safety that a team will be getting a steal on at an injury discount. Winston Jr. is a franchise-caliber safety who can line up as a strong safety in the box and in deep coverage. Kevin finished 2023 as the fourth-highest graded safety in the country with an 89.2 overall grade and the highest graded tackler at safety with a 92.8 grade, and he only missed two tackles in his career. Don’t let the tackle numbers lead you to think that Winston Jr. is only a run stopper, because he also finished 2023 with an 86.8 coverage grade to go with it, making him one of the more polished and complete safeties in the country.

Washington Commanders work out PFF’s highest graded wide receiver draft prospect


South Alabama wide receiver Jamaal Pritchett tells me that he worked out for the Washington Commanders in Alabama on Monday morning.

Pritchett has made the most of his draft process this offseason as he represented the home team at the Senior Bowl against the top prospects in the NFL draft. After being snubbed from an invite to the NFL Combine, Jamaal would go on to blow scouts away at South Alabama’s pro day with a 4.39-4.42 40-yard dash, and a 9-foot-9 broad jump.

The productive wide receiver prospect finished the 2024 season with an 88.2 PFF grade against zone coverage, the highest among all wide receivers in the 2025 NFL draft. Prichett had 91 catches in 2024, the third-most in the country. The former Jaguar also led the nation in yards after catch, with 759 of his 1,126 yards coming after the ball was in his hands, making him an open-field weapon.

Jamaal Pritchett also added punt returner to his resume in his final season at South Alabama with 12 returns for 183 yards at a 15.3 yards per return average, and added a touchdown. Washington doesn’t have a clear special-teams returner on the roster right now, and can certainly add Pritchett to the mix of options if they draft him in April.


Podcasts & videos

Noah Brown is BACK for More MAGIC | Next Man Up | Washington Commanders | NFL Free Agency​



On video with ⁦@nfldraftscout⁩. Get to know the offensive options at 29 and beyond. Going over each position. Good insight on possible picks for the Commanders. ⁦@ESPNRichmondhttps://t.co/iTApVb98uD

— John Keim (@john_keim) April 8, 2025


The Commanders held their local pro day today in Ashburn. I'll discuss this on the next podcast episode (drops tonight), and get into some "30" visits and other pre-draft nuggets.

Apple - https://t.co/PoUDgL1FML

Spotify - https://t.co/cg05yIwsET

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) April 8, 2025


Episode 1,045 - Guest: @NickiJhabvala. Great analysis of & intel on the Commanders.
- Adam Peters' offseason strategy
- Brandon Coleman vs. Andrew Wylie
- coaching-staff continuity on offense
- story time on her famous photo of Dan Quinn at Regan Nationalhttps://t.co/fnTWbjRwzY

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) April 8, 2025

NFC East links

Blogging the Boys

Why the Joe Milton trade is a much better deal for the Cowboys than the move for Trey Lance


They rolled the dice when they traded for Trey Lance, the former no. 3 overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft. Lance was an incredibly raw quarterback when he entered the league and only threw 102 passes before the San Francisco 49ers decided to give up on him. The brain-trust at The Star believed there was still something there and gave the 49ers a fourth-round pick in exchange for the last two years of his rookie deal.

Because the Cowboys acquired him in late August of 2023, he only had one training camp with the team. He never saw the field that season and only saw any real action in one game over his two seasons with the team. He finished his career in Dallas going 25 for 41 for 266 yards with no touchdowns and one interception. Needless to say, the Lance trade didn’t work out so well for the Cowboys.

Not to be discouraged, the Cowboys are making another trip to the ‘pet sematary’, hoping things will work out differently this time. The team has given it another go by making a trade with the New England Patriots for last year’s sixth-round pick, Joe Milton.

Things are different this time. At least, that is what we want to believe. Milton doesn’t have the draft pedigree of Lance, but his inexperience as a pocket passer is evident which is why he was a late-round pick. The Patriots invested their third-overall pick in Drake Maye last year, and they bought some insurance in the form of Joshua Dobbs in free agency, so it was going to be a tight squeeze to keep Milton on the team as he would serve only as a development guy to keep in their back pocket.

But now, he’s in the Cowboys’ pocket. For a fanbase that’s had to witness the underwhelming arm strength of Rush over the last few years, the rocket arm of Milton is quite intriguing. But we shouldn’t ignore that the Patriots had him in their clubhouse for a year and were perfectly okay with giving him up for almost nothing. The Cowboys gave up a late fifth-round pick but got an early seventh-rounder in return, making the cost of acquiring Milton equivalent to a sixth-round pick.

The gist of it is that Milton needs a lot of work. He’s a big guy with a big arm who will elude pressure and make some fun plays, but to believe he’s a guy who can step in and keep the offense humming, that’s a little optimistic. Entering the league, Milton had several passing deficiencies that made him not quite ready for Sunday action. The biggest knock has been throwing catchable balls. He didn’t throw his guys open or have a soft touch, as he just rifled his passes to his receivers. He would tip off where he was going with the ball, allowing defenders a chance to contest his throws. While he did a good job taking care of the ball, he wasn’t a guy who could make accurate throws down the field. During his last year in college, he completed just 38.6 percent of his throws beyond 10 yards.

The Cowboys will enter the upcoming season with a new project quarterback, but things are different this time. The cost was way less and the team gets three years of player control instead of just two. They’ll also have more than just one training camp to work with him. What Milton ultimately becomes is unknown, but credit the Cowboys for trying and doing so at a low cost.


Big Blue View

New York Giants to host former Bears DE for free agent visit


DeMarcus Walker had 7.0 sacks playing for Shane Bowen in 2022

Walker, who will be 31 in September, was a second-round pick by the Denver Broncos in 2017. He played four years for the Broncos, one each for the Houston Texans and Tennessee Titans, and the last two seasons with the Chicago Bears. As a member of the Titans in 2022, Walker played for Shane Bowen, Tennessee defensive coordinator at the time. Walker had a career-best 7.0 sacks that season.

Walker started all 17 games for the Bears in 2024, finishing with 3.5 sacks and a career-high 47 tackles.

In 100 career regular-season games, including 42 starts, Walker has 26.5 sacks.


NFL league links

Articles​

ESPN

Does Deshaun Watson have a future in Cleveland, the NFL?


Watson, who has been one of the NFL’s worst quarterbacks since joining the Browns, is rehabbing from a right Achilles tendon injury that cut his season short for a second straight year and could sideline him for the 2025 season. Speculation had risen about his future in Cleveland even before Haslam’s candid admission at the league meetings. But his words cast further doubt whether Watson will play another down for the Browns, even as his bloated contract keeps him in Cleveland for at least one more season — while executives and agents around the league expressed doubt to ESPN that the former Pro Bowl quarterback will get another opportunity in the NFL, even if healthy.

[In 2024], he threw five touchdown passes and failed to reach 200 passing yards in any of his seven starts. Watson then ruptured his right Achilles tendon against the Cincinnati Bengals in October. The injury was met with cheers from the Cleveland home crowd. Three months later, the Browns announced Watson had a second surgery on his Achilles after tearing it again this winter and would miss a significant portion of the 2025 season.

In 19 starts for the Browns, Watson’s 34.2 Total QBR is second worst to the Tennessee Titans’ Will Levis among qualified passers. But now, with Watson’s expected lengthy absence, the front office is left to completely remodel the quarterbacks room. The Browns did not re-sign Jameis Winston, last year’s backup, and in March, the team traded for 2022 first-round pick Kenny Pickett, sending the Philadelphia Eagles a fifth-round pick and quarterback Dorian Thompson-Robinson.

Cleveland hasn’t provided an update on Watson’s status, saying it’s too early for a definitive return timeline.

“I think [doctors are] confident that he can [return from injury],” Jimmy Haslam said, “but you got to do it, you know what I mean?”

Watson tearing his Achilles again impacts his rehab “pretty significantly.”

“Anytime you have [to] go back in somewhere, it changes the ballgame a little bit ... typically that means slower recovery in the beginning and a longer overall recovery, and the clock starts back over,” the specialist said. “So, now you’re looking at closer to 10 months to a year. I mean, it’s nine months again, if you’re lucky.”

The specialist said expectations for the recovery period for multiple tears need to be “tamped down a little bit.”

“I would say there’s ... [more] likelihood that he doesn’t play [in 2025] than he does, from a medical standpoint,” the specialist said. “That’s not including what the team might want to do with him in terms of whether they would risk him playing, if they’re going to move on from him.”

The Browns owe Watson $46 million in each of the next two seasons and have already restructured his contract multiple times — most recently in March — converting salary to a bonus and pushing cap charges into the future to free space. There is $173 million in cap hits remaining on Watson’s contract, and parting ways with him this offseason would mean the entirety of that dead money...is placed on the 2025 season, which would make filling out the roster for the fall impractical.

According to a copy of Watson’s contract obtained by ESPN last fall, the Browns have up to $44.2 million of his 2025 salary insured.

“If released, I don’t see anyone picking him up,” an NFC executive told ESPN. “And then, down the road, the question will be, will he take low-QB money? Would he even be motivated to play at that point?”


Front Office Sports

NFL Gives Fans What They Want: More Throwback Uniform Games


Throwback and alternate jerseys already overindex in sales among NFL fans. Now, that trend is set to expand as the league further liberalizes its rules.

Team owners at last week’s annual league meeting in Florida approved a shift in which teams will be allowed to wear alternate uniforms as many as four times during the season, up from a prior three times per club. Critically, teams also gained approval to wear alternate helmets with primary home and road jerseys, creating many additional potential uniform combinations.

The change will also mean that particularly popular NFL throwback uniforms, such as the Kelly green of the Super Bowl LIX champion Eagles, the Buccaneers’ “Creamsicles,” and the Broncos’ “Orange Crush” jerseys, can be worn for nearly a quarter of the regular season.

Alternates and throwbacks amount to as much as 30% of all NFL jersey sales—a figure outstripping their presence on the field and showing their outsized popularity with fans. Players also have frequently lauded the alternate looks.

There will still be some guardrails in the NFL uniform expansion, however, including a prohibition on alternate jerseys in the Super Bowl.

“[C]onsistency...needs to be there from a brand standpoint,” said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. “When someone turns on the TV, it’s great to see a new uniform, a new look, but you also want to know it’s the Denver Broncos.”


Discussion topics

ESPN

2025 NFL mock draft: Kiper’s pick predictions for Rounds 1-2


You’ll notice some shake-ups since my last mock draft in March. Things could get interesting right off the bat, and I shuffled landing spots in the top five. Over the course of two rounds, there are a few risers and fallers, too, based on what I’ve heard in my discussions with NFL execs and coaches. And I have five quarterbacks getting picked, including two in the top 10.

Let’s dig into my predictions for the first 64 picks. And for more on these potential selections, check out the “SportsCenter Special” and listen to the “First Draft” podcast.

61. Washington Commanders​


Darien Porter, CB, Iowa State

I’m intrigued by Porter as a Day 2 pick because there’s a lot of untapped potential. He’s a former receiver who is still learning the nuances of the cornerback position. He has 4.3 40 speed, plenty of length and the ball skills to create takeaways. Porter picked off three passes last season. The Commanders added Jonathan Jones and [re-signed] Noah Igbinoghene to replace Benjamin St-Juste and Emmanuel Forbes Jr. (who was cut last season), but Porter could develop into a starter.

One other consideration: Oklahoma State’s Nick Martin would be an interesting addition to the linebacker corps. He is a fast riser late in the process.


All aTwitter


Commander Nash will be at the Draft Party!!!! @Commanders #raisehail #ub21king #commandernash pic.twitter.com/jG81gkDdzd

— Commander Nash (@UB21KING) April 8, 2025

Washington #Commanders hold LOCAL PRO DAY❗

at DC, MARYLAND, VA natives that attended.

Who would look Best in that Burgundy and Gold⁉️#RaiseHail #HailYeah #HTTC pic.twitter.com/W2SBmSUFGl

— Chad Ricardo (@RealChadRicardo) April 9, 2025

Former Virginia safety Jonas Sanker is on a visit to the #Commanders today before visiting the #Panthers on Wednesday and the #Falcons and #Lions next week. A busy month for one of the draft’s cleaner prospects.pic.twitter.com/8gfwyQ8z9O

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) April 8, 2025

A notable from today’s Commanders Local Day — Tulane DL Adin Huntington, who Washington has continued to express interest in throughout the predraft process.

He met separately with HC Dan Quinn, GM Adam Peters & pass rush specialist Ryan Kerrigan, I’m told. A name to know on…

— Ryan Fowler (@_RyanFowler_) April 8, 2025

@CROD_JR was cuttin up today ‍

DAY 1 & MORE ON THE WAY #httc #raisehail pic.twitter.com/tBViQBT4xG

— Martino DeSalvaje (@TheCoachSavage) April 8, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/DcEqISpju2

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 8, 2025

The Gr8 One: Alex Ovechkin https://t.co/Ji5zrDsbnq pic.twitter.com/57QoeD7aG5

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) April 8, 2025

Gotta love what you're seeing from the @Nationals these last few days.

They win their second straight series, winning back to back games over the Dodgers.

Final: Nationals 8, Dodgers 2

— Natalie Spala (@_nataliespala) April 9, 2025

Just like that, the Nationals have a four-game winning streak on April 8.

They had just two winning streaks of 4+ games last season.

— Jake Russell (@_JakeRussell) April 9, 2025

Ted Leonsis on buying the Nationals from the Lerners: “I’m interested, but it doesn’t seem right now that they’re that interested.” pic.twitter.com/Th7KECLsUs

— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) April 8, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/9/...al-pro-day-tuesday-ahead-of-this-months-draft
 
Daily Slop - 10 Apr 25 - Long-time Washington trainer Al Bellamy honored with prestigious honorary league award

v8hgyuwv2wyutzez9fx8.0.jpg


A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

NFL.com

2025 NFL Draft: One burning question for each NFC team before Round 1 begins


BURNING QUESTION: What kind of payday is Terry McLaurin looking at?

McLaurin is entering the final year of a three-year deal he signed in 2022, and there are many reasons why he should be looking for a raise in his extension talks with Washington. For one, he’s the favorite target of star quarterback Jayden Daniels. McLaurin finished 2024 with 82 receptions, 1,096 yards and a career-high 13 touchdowns, helping Daniels claim Offensive Rookie of the Year honors. He also appears to be a stand-up guy who brings valuable leadership to a team that went from being a bottom-feeder to playing in the NFC Championship Game. Even though McLaurin turns 30 in September, he’s still a productive player at a position where top-end talent is paid between $30 million to $40 million annually. The Commanders have cap space, and they’ve been spending plenty lately. McLaurin shouldn’t be paid at the top of the market, given his age, but he certainly deserves a hefty bump from his current annual average salary of $23.2 million.


Commanders.com

10 draft prospects for Commanders fans to watch in 4th round


The opinions expressed in this article do not reflect those of the team.

Denzel Burke, CB, Ohio State: Burke was a four-year starter for Ohio State and was an Honorable Mention All-Big Ten selection with a team-tying two interceptions in 2024. He excels at run support and has a good feel for zone coverage.

RJ Harvey, RB, UCF: Although there are several viable options at running back this year, teams will be hard-pressed to find a player who scored as much as Harvey. He had 38 rushing touchdowns over the past two seasons and back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons. He’s also averaged over six yards per carry since 2022.

Kyle Williams, WR, Washington State: Williams is small but knows how to make plays, as he had 14 touchdowns for the Cougars last year. He also had one of the fastest 10-yard splits at the combine, so he can get separation quickly for explosive plays, which somewhat makes up for his limited route tree.

Kyle Kennard, EDGE, South Carolina: Kennard moved up a step by transferring from Georgia Tech to South Carolina and had his best season yet with 11.5 sacks. He’s another developmental project with high upside if he gets with the right coaching staff.


Ed Block Courage Award Foundation​

Honorary Ed Block Award: 2024 Co-Winners - Al Bellamy & Joe O’Pella


Since 2021, the Ed Block Courage Award Foundation has recognized members within the NFL community for their courage and inspiration.

Their story is featured during the Ed Block Courage Award events, culminating in receiving the same Courage Award trophy presented annually to the NFL players. In 2024, two members of PFATS (Professional Football Athletic Trainer’s Society) were selected for their determination through in-season serious medical issues.

Washington Commanders Head Athletic Trainer, Al Bellamy, served the franchise starting in 1998-2001 (winning a Super Bowl in 1991) as an assistant before returning in 2022. He was nominated for the Honorary Ed Block Courage Award by Head Coach, Dan Quinn, after receiving a cancer diagnosis in early 2024, which would lead to a year-long battle. Through multiple surgeries, treatments, trials and tribulations, Bellamy continued to work tirelessly to help the team find success. He worked throughout the rigors of training camp, eventually being hospitalized for several days due to unforeseen complications. His dedication and commitment to the Washington Commanders was evident, as the team is proud to honor him with this award for his perseverance in the face of the harshest battle.

The admiration by members across both organizations and their resolve to support the team even through the toughest challenges make them ideal candidates to be recognized as a 2024 Honorary Ed Block Awardees.

PAST HONORARY ED BLOCK AWARDEE

  • 2023 – OJ and Chanda Brigance
  • 2022 – Brandon “Poe” Williams
  • 2021 – Wade Harman

Sports Illustrated

Gabriel to the Commanders?


ESPN writer Ben Solak believes Oregon quarterback Dillon Gabriel, who holds the FBS record for most touchdown passes, could be a fit for the Commanders in undrafted free agency.

“Gabriel leaves college as one of the most productive passers in NCAA history, but he does not project as an NFL passer,” Solak writes. “He’s 5-11 and does not have the movement traits or arm talent of Bryce Young or Kyler Murray. Gabriel has a quick release and fast eyes, so he could work in college-inspired offenses like those in Washington (Kliff Kingsbury) or potentially Las Vegas (Chip Kelly).”

Gabriel would also get a chance to learn from Marcus Mariota, who both went to Hawaii and attended the University of Oregon, so that further connects the two sides to a deal.


Podcasts & videos


On video with ⁦@RealBramW⁩ as we make the case for offense for the Commanders at 29. Some names to consider but also why the O might need just a bit more. ⁦@ESPNRichmondhttps://t.co/RQPrVAxcIA

— John Keim (@john_keim) April 10, 2025


Episode 1,046 - Guest: @MarkBullockNFL. All-22-style analysis of three RBs in the 2025 NFL Draft who would be great fits for the Commanders: TreVeyon Henderson (perfect play style for Peters/Quinn), Omarion Hampton (true RB1) & Bhayshul Tuten (HR threat).https://t.co/9AwxQeXDAG

— Al Galdi (@AlGaldi) April 9, 2025


New @TraporDive ! ️@DCSportsDre & @LetMualTellit talk Wes Welker hire, expert mock draft reviews, & best approach for Commanders pick 29. #RaiseHail

- https://t.co/nxxD18IiPz

- https://t.co/HTyvKxindlhttps://t.co/kpcdcULd1L

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) April 9, 2025

NFC East links

Blogging the Boys

Cowboys free agency: Dallas will sign OL Saahdiq Charles to a 1-year deal


After working out offensive lineman Saahdiq Charles a few days ago, the Cowboys will sign him to a one-year contract.

Charles is coming out of retirement after leaving the game last year during training camp with the Tennessee Titans. He was originally a fourth-round pick by Washington. He started 18 games for the team, and participated in 35 games during his four years with the franchise. He signed with the Titans in free agency last year, and was even given a starting guard designation, but he abruptly retired.


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Dane Brugler’s 2025 NFL Draft guide - The Beast


The goal for “The Beast” is the same each year — to create the most comprehensive and detailed NFL Draft guide available. From background information to scouting analysis and NFL-verified testing data for thousands of prospects, this is a passion project that takes more than a year to put together. This version of “The Beast” includes more than 400 player profiles and rankings for nearly 2,700 prospects.

Whether you’re trying to learn about your favorite team’s newest star, want to dig deep into a specific position or simply hope to drop a little knowledge on your draft watch party, we’ve got you covered. This year we are also excited to launch a brand new, interactive experience to explore the depths of “The Beast,” and the classic, printable version is still available to download.

For many of you, the draft guide has become an annual part of your draft prep, and I can’t thank you enough for the support over the years. If this is the first time you’re checking it out, I know you won’t be disappointed.


Examining Commanders’ potential needs using ‘The Beast’ NFL Draft guide


The Commanders’ first pick is No. 29. Predicting which players will be available to choose from is a dart throw. Due to free-agent signings and two recent trades, Washington has no screaming needs, which means numerous positions and paths are in play. That includes trading out of the first round to add more picks, a possibility when you have a mere five with only three in the first 128 selections, plus two picks post-200.

A few positional scenarios stand out. Brugler’s voluminous guide will help direct this journey.

Edge rusher​


The Commanders have constructed a viable yet unsexy defensive end rotation for the coming season. However, no prominent performer exists at a critical position, nor is there an apparent pass rusher likely to replace the 10 1/2 sacks generated last season by new Dallas Cowboys edge Dante Fowler Jr. Projected starters Dorance Armstrong and ex-New England Patriot Deatrich Wise combined for 10 sacks in 2024.

As Brugler’s rankings reflect, this class offers ample opportunity for improvement. Six edge rushers received first-round grades. Even if the Round 1 shelf is clear by No. 29, Brugler has 14 edge rushers worthy of second-round picks and 17 among his top 100 prospects. By comparison, cornerback (11), another area of need for Washington, thins out deeper into the first 100. Same with wide receiver (12) and running back (nine).

In a stick-and-pick world, the bendy Ezeiruaku is the best bet to be there at 29, though don’t hold your breath after a season with 16 1/2 sacks and 21 tackles for loss. Another wave of edge defenders will go before Washington’s second-round pick (No. 61), but the potential options are interesting. Arkansas’ Landon Jackson and Texas A&M’s Nic Scourton are highly competitive all-around linemen who fit the Commanders’ preferred traits, including being college team captains.

UCLA’s Oluwafemi Oladejo, a linebacker until switching positions during the 2024 campaign, is the wild card, having received some first-round buzz. Expand the list into the fourth round, and Brugler’s rankings include 24 edge defenders versus 16 cornerbacks. That doesn’t mean Washington should plan to wait before drafting one, but it can. Positional importance puts edge defenders high on any logical needs list for the Commanders.


Front Office Sports

LA28 Flag Football Push Pits Goodell and Players Against NFL Owners


Flag football in the 2028 Summer Olympics has been a buzzy topic for nearly two years. Participation in that event by active NFL players is a much more complex situation.

Commissioner Roger Goodell and the league office united with the NFL Players Association in likely opposition with team owners over the issue of player participation.

For nearly two years, NFL leaders have been openly enthused about the prospect of active players being part of the talent pool for Olympic teams, both to help promote youth participation and advance the league’s expanding global ambitions. As several individual stars, such as Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill, have been similarly bullish about competing in Los Angeles, the union has also been publicly supportive of the concept.

Some team owners, however, have expressed injury concerns, while others have cited potential issues between the 2028 Olympics and the start of NFL training camps, both happening in late July.

“I think that’s something we’ll continue to discuss with, not just the union, but also the clubs,” [Goodell] said. “I think both of those are things that we’ll probably resolve in the next 60 days.”


Discussion topics

Football Zebras

NFL relegates 3 officials to work in college conferences


Football Zebras has learned that three officials recently hired by the NFL have been dismissed, but it is the novel way that this was carried out that is noteworthy.

The three officials were essentially relegated back to Power conferences in college football, a move that was specifically brokered by George, according to five officiating sources. Previously, officials that have been dismissed were on their own accord to return to collegiate football.

The three officials that the NFL has placed back into the Power 5 conferences are second-year umpire James Carter, third-year line judge Robin DeLorenzo, and first-year down judge Robert Richeson. Carter was an alternate official in the wild card round last season, but due to multiple injuries at the position, that may have been a necessity. DeLorenzo did not qualify for a postseason game in her two eligible seasons. Richeson was not playoff eligible as he was only in his first season.

All three officials do have the ability to work at the college level, re-enter the development program, and work their way back into the NFL. Some of the sources we spoke to were skeptical that it is possible for an official to return to the league, but most of those we spoke to acknowledged that there is no way to be certain, since this hadn’t been done before.

“The culture is is changing, it’s changing rapidly,” said an official who spoke to us on the condition of anonymity. “It’s changing into a competitive environment where everybody’s equal. There are no favorites. There’s no favoritism. There’s none of that; it’s all about performance.”

Another source stated that the union was not involved in the relegation process. As it was described, by these officials accepting the offer to the college conference, it bypasses the union entirely and an grievance process.


Over the Cap

New OTC Page: Rookie Classes By APY


Last month, Ben Baldwin had a fun tweet I found quite intriguing, reranking the 2020 NFL Draft by size of players’ second contracts by APY:


What if we blindly re-ranked the 2020 draft using APY of 2nd contract?

-- 12 of the first 12 players are QB, WR, OT, or interior DL
--Sometimes the obvious No. 1 pick really was that obvious pic.twitter.com/twKH1oc1il

— Computer Cowboy (@benbbaldwin) March 21, 2025

Given that the source for this data is right here at OTC, it was evident to me that this exercise could be done for any draft. I also decided to use a different twist on this–instead of ranking by second contract, I looked at ranking to the highest APY each player has ever signed for.

This led to the construction of the Rookie Classes By APY page, found within this link.

The methodology is fairly simple: obtain each player’s maximum APY in his career, then rank all the players on such, and give an estimation of which round, if any, they would have been drafted in based solely on this APY relative to the total number of draft picks that season (~256). Obviously, maximum APY is not going to be a precise overlap on the overall player performance–some positions, particularly quarterback, get paid higher even as backups, and plenty of times a team has overestimated how much a player is worth when they sign such players in free agency. But there is enough correlation that I found this exercise to be useful.

Here were some of the notable trends I saw, and it’s worth comparing to Jason’s earlier work of positional drafting strategies:

  • Quarterback is very feast or famine–as is well known, the pay between starter level and backup level is vast, resulting in very few contracts ranked in the 2nd or 3rd round. However, even backups get sizeable contracts that end up in that 4th to 6th round range, roughly within a rank of 100th to 200th.
  • The ends of both lines–tackle and edge rusher–are very first round heavy, with pluralities between one fourth and one fifth falling within the top 32 ranked players. This is more confirmation that along with quarterback, these positions should be drafted highly
  • Wide receiver shows a bit of a U curve, with high 1st round rankings descending to a trough right in the middle, at the 4th round, before ascending again to frequent numbers in the late rounds. This likely indicates the difference between #1 and #2 WRs, versus slot receivers and backups.
  • Interior defensive line and cornerback are distributed fairly evenly throughout the rankings, showing value all throughout each round of such a hypothetical draft.
  • Guard salaries lag behind the above a bit, with most falling in the 2nd to 3rd round range–however, the trend of increased salaries at the position could see this change in the future.
  • Most remaining positions on offense and defense show low quantities in the early rankings, and increasing amounts later on, again suggesting that these are not priority positions to pursue.
  • Fullback and the special teams positions of course round out the bottom, but even viable starters there tend to cluster in the rankings around the 3rd round (kicker), 4th round (punter), or 5th round (long snapper and fullback). This does not suggest that these positions should be drafted then, or anywhere. But it does demonstrate that players that stick here are still able to earn APYs higher than fringe players, including some draft picks, that end up having shorter careers, not even becoming vested veterans.

All aTwitter


Running it back at @NationalHarbor for this year's draft party @Seatgeek | #RaiseHail

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 9, 2025

Jayden took the Hail Mary to hang in the Louvre pic.twitter.com/J5KJnSvOw8

— Eric Nathan (@BarstoolNate) April 9, 2025


Richard Sherman on Deebo Samuel being traded to the Commanders:

"Sometimes you have too many mouths to feed and you don't have enough footballs. There's only one football and you're trying to feed Christian McCaffrey, Kittle, Aiyuk, you're trying to get it to Deebo and now you… pic.twitter.com/WxNsIHDFP5

— Coach Yac (@Coach_Yac) March 5, 2025

The Commanders will host USC DB Jaylin Smith for a 30 visit, per source.

Standout at the Senior Bowl with experience all over the secondary has been a player Washington has been tied to throughout the process.

— Ryan Fowler (@_RyanFowler_) April 9, 2025

The Commanders named head athletic trainer Al Bellamy an honorary recipient of the Ed Block Courage Award. Bellamy was diagnosed with cancer last year, but continued working through treatment.

— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) April 9, 2025


The Cowboys are signing OL Saahdiq Charles to a one-year deal, according to a source. He worked out for the team last week. He retired last season after signing with Tennessee following a four-year run with Washington. He has 18 starts in 35 games.

— Todd Archer (@toddarcher) April 9, 2025


I've talked to several GM's and HC's over the last week & everyone seems to agree-- this draft is a starter draft. Maybe not a ton of star power but your goal should be to come away with 3-4 solid starters. They are out there. Go find them.

— Daniel Jeremiah (@MoveTheSticks) April 8, 2025


RFK UPDATE

Sources say stadium discussions between District & Commanders continue to progress while DC waits for budget fix from Congress. No deal would be announced until after bill passes restoring DC budget, which likely won’t happen until end of April at earliest.
(1/2) pic.twitter.com/tlIbvWubNU

— Eric Flack (@EricFlackTV) April 9, 2025

Commanders continue to negotiate w/Mayor’s office while updating Councilmembers, as Bowser would be the one to agree to terms but Council still has to approve agreement. Something around $500+ Mil is in line with what others got in past, w/DC investment focused on infrastructure.

— Eric Flack (@EricFlackTV) April 9, 2025

posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/BvVisXCygO

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 9, 2025

Per Sources: Gregg Williams is gone as the DC for the Defenders https://t.co/ctneOyimOJ

— DeeLovesSports (@DeeLovesSports) April 9, 2025

New Alex Ovechkin bobbleheads from @FOCOusa added to celebrate the Gr8 One's scoring record!https://t.co/Wh7UEYhUe8 https://t.co/gU0TZzdUEF pic.twitter.com/BJisf6CN3E

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) April 9, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/10...onored-with-prestigious-honorary-league-award
 
2025 NFL Mock Draft Roundup: Mel Kiper Jr has a new pick for the Washington Commanders’ defense

Texas v Texas A&M

Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images

Who is Washington picking in 2025?

The NFL Draft is two weeks away, and we’ve got a fresh roundup of mock drafts to check out. Mel Kiper Jr released his latest mock draft and he’s finally given up on giving Kentucky CB Maxwell Hairston to the Washington Commanders with the 29th pick. He’s staying on defense and giving Joe Whitt Jr a new player by picking Texas A&M EDGE Shemar Stewart for the Commanders. Defensive end is a need after Washington let last year’s sack-leader, Dante Fowler Jr, leave in free agency. They signed Deatrich Wise and Jacob Martin in free agency, but Stewart gives them a young DE that can help with their run defense and develop as a pass rusher. Kiper still wants to give the Commanders a CB, and he does thanks to Kiper’s first two-round mock for this year’s draft.

EDGE/DE is still the most popular pick for the Washington Commanders by far, and we have six different options to choose from this week. Stewart and James Pearce Jr were Washington’s most popular picks this week with four different mock drafts having them going to Washington at No. 29. Both players are projected to get drafted before Washington currently picks, but the draft is unpredictable, and there are several DEs rated in the mid-late 1st round range this year.

We have less options at wide receiver this week, but Luther Burden III is just as popular as the top defensive players, getting four selections to Washington. North Carolina RB Omarion Hampton continues to be a popular pick, going to the Commanders in three mocks.

In this week’s only first round trade for the Commanders, they trade out of Day 1 completely so Drake Maye can get a new weapon on offense. They pick up two extra picks, but there’s unfortunately no second round available to see who they would have picked at No. 38, and whether it was worth the nine-spot drop to pick up a 4th- and 7th-round pick.

Position breakdown:


EDGE/DE – 6

DL – 2

CB – 3

S – 2

WR – 3

RB – 2

OT – 1

Trade down - 1

Washington Commanders 2025 NFL Draft Picks


Round 1 - #29

Round 2 - #61

Round 4 (via HOU) - #128

Round 6 - #205

Round 7 (from DEN via PHI) - #245


Shemar Stewart, EDGE, Texas A&M

E$PN+(Kiper)

Stewart’s draft stock is hard to predict. As I mentioned earlier, I considered him for Cincinnati at No. 17. He comes off the board here, 12 spots later. It’s the same dilemma that GMs will be struggling with on draft night. Stewart has all the talent in the world — speed, explosiveness and power. But he also had 4.5 sacks over three seasons. If an NFL coaching staff can help him put it all together, the upside is immense. I’m betting on Commanders coach Dan Quinn unlocking that potential. Dante Fowler Jr.’s departure in free agency means there’s a hole opposite Dorance Armstrong on the D-line.

Round 2: Darien Porter, CB, Iowa State

I’m intrigued by Porter as a Day 2 pick because there’s a lot of untapped potential. He’s a former receiver who is still learning the nuances of the cornerback position. He has 4.3 40 speed, plenty of length and the ball skills to create takeaways. Porter picked off three passes last season. The Commanders added Jonathan Jones and Noah Igbinoghene to replace Benjamin St-Juste and Emmanuel Forbes Jr. (who was cut last season), but Porter could develop into a starter.

One other consideration: Oklahoma State’s Nick Martin would be an interesting addition to the linebacker corps. He is a fast riser late in the process.

CBS Sports(Wilson)

For an edge rusher Stewart is enormous. He’ll play too high at times but he can collapse the pocket with his size/power/strength. He’s got a quick first step, even for his size, with the power to shoot gaps. And when the bull rush doesn’t get home, his huge frame allows him to knock down passes. He has a hair-on-fire motor who consistently plays with power and athleticism.

Round 2: Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State

Fantasy Life(Nystrom)

The Commanders are committed to fixing their run defense—they need an immediate EDGE starter, and want one who excels against the run … Stewart qualifies.

Round 2: Cam Skattebo, RB, Arizona State

The Huddle(Dorey)

Mike Green, EDGE, Marshall

USA Today(Middlehurst-Schwartz)

Two sexual assault allegations could complicate Green’s draft outlook. But if he’s available at this point – and there’s a chance that his range is closer to the teens – and the Commanders are comfortable with the selection, the Football Bowl Subdivision leader in sacks could be a critical cornerstone for a pass rush that lacks a dynamic presence.

James Pearce Jr, EDGE, Tennessee

CBS Sports (Trapasso)

Washington calls in this pick immediately. Maturity issues be damned, Pearce was a tremendously productive defensive end at Tennessee over the past two seasons.

Round 2: Andrew Mukuba, S, Texas

Round 4: Jaylen Reed, S, Penn State

Round 6: Kaimon Rucker, EDGE, North Carolina

Round 7: Justin Walley, CB, Minnesota

The 33rd Team(Mosher)

Dan Quinn has had a lot of success with twitchy, undersized EDGE rushers, and Pearce certainly qualifies. He’s likely not an every-down player right away, as he needs to put on some weight.

Still, he can bend around the edge and create havoc on opposing quarterbacks. Pearce could fall further than this, but the Commanders are a good landing spot for him and his talent.

FTN Fantasy(Ratcliffe)

Like the Lions, Washington is favored to go defensive line/edge first (+170). Pearce offers an explosive presence along the edge.

Fantasy Life(Freedman)

Donovan Ezeiruaku, EDGE, Boston College

NFL.com(Lewis)

Ezeiruaku fell just shy of Mike Green with 16.5 sacks last season; fittingly, the Boston College product comes off the board right behind his Marshall counterpart in this exercise, giving the Commanders a bona fide pass-rush presence. Ezeiruaku is on the smaller side for a true NFL defensive end, but Dan Quinn will get the most out of his abilities.

4 For 4(Allen)

Ezeiruaku is a fringe first-rounder but after recording 16.5 sacks his final season at Boston College will likely get a heavy look here.

Nic Scourton, DE, Texas A&M(Draft profile)

Bleacher Nation(Rooney)

The Commanders had a solid free agency period, but getting to the quarterback is still a need they must address. Nic Scourton was a monster at Texas A&M, and his all-around skill set would be a big addition for them up front.

NFL Draft Countdown(Bosarge)

Round 2: Quinshon Judkins, RB, Ohio State

Round 4: Tez Johnson, WR, Oregon

Round 6: Dante Trader, S, Maryland

Round 7: Desmond Watson, DL, Florida

Fox Sports(Wright)

Oluwafemi Oladejo, EDGE, UCLA(Draft profile)

Fantasy Pros(Erickson)

Derrick Harmon, DL, Oregon

College Football Network(Evans)

Washington was the surprise team of the season after making it all the way to the NFC title game. Now, they look to build off that momentum. The offense was the catalyst for the Commanders last year and even buffed it up with the addition of Deebo Samuel. Now, they look to improve the defense, which was great against the pass, ranked third, but not so great against the run, ranked 29th.

What better way to plug up the line of scrimmage than 6’5”, 310-pound Derrick Harmon? The former Duck led the nation in pressures for an interior lineman in 2024, with 55. The next best had 43. He also has fast hands and can shed off blockers quickly, which is especially useful in the run game.

Round 2: Marcus Mbow, OT, Purdue

Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan

NBC Sports(Maiocco)

The Commanders decide to go big with their first-round selection to beef up the interior of their D-line.

Benjamin Morrison, CB, Notre Dame

USA Today(Ostly)

Washington needs an upgrade at cornerback in a division featuring A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, CeeDee Lamb and Malik Nabers. Morrison excels in zone coverage thanks to his length and linear speed and had lots of ball production at Notre Dame.

Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky

Draft Wire(Risdon)

Hairston is an aggressive ballhawk who also happens to be the fastest CB in the class from combine testing. He’s a high-energy personality that can help bring some sizzle to the Commanders backside defense.

Round 2: Jordan Burch, DT, Oregon

Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State

NFL.com(Jones-Drew)

The Commanders select a long, rangy cornerback who can disrupt the passing game. Thomas has plenty of room to grow, but he possesses the tools and physicality to thrive under Dan Quinn.

Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina

College Football Network(Lazarczyk)

Reaching the NFC championship was quite an accomplishment for the Commanders last season. However, the defense was a liability at times in 2024, and with receivers like A.J. Brown, CeeDee Lamb, Devonta Smith, and Malik Nabers in the division, Washington needs to keep that in mind with this pick.

Washington traded multiple picks to the New Orleans Saints for Marshon Lattimore, but the back end of that defense is still a work in progress. Nick Emmanwori is primarily a strong safety who plays closer to the line of scrimmage.

In three years at South Carolina, the 6’3″, 220-pound defensive back had 88 tackles, including 57 solo tackles. Defending the pass is something he will have to work on at the next level, but his ability to stifle the run while guarding receivers underneath will prove to be more than effective.

Round 2: Carson Schwesinger, LB, UCLA

Malaki Starks, S, Georgia

Pro Football Network(Weissman)

Washington has holes all over the secondary, especially at safety. They’d be smart to add talent here in the first round to help solidify things in a pass-heavy league.

Malaki Starks is a top-tier safety prospect with athleticism and instincts. He has the range and ball skills to thrive in multiple coverage schemes.

Round 2: Princely Umanmielen, EDGE, Ole Miss

Washington still needs pass-rush help, and Princely Umanmielen has the traits to be productive. He’s a little undersized but makes up for it with savvy and quickness.

Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State

CBS Sports(Prisco)

They added Deebo Samuel, but they need more help than that. Egbuka is a smart receiver who runs better than he gets credit for doing. Jayden Daniels would come to love his game.

Walter Football(Campbell)

Deebo Samuel is nearing the end of his contract, and the Commanders could use more weapons for Jayden Daniels.

In 2023, Egbuka had 81 catches for 1,011 yards and 10 touchdowns. The 6-foot-1, 205-pounder turned in 74 receptions for 1,151 yards and 10 touchdowns in 2022. He emerged as a potential No. 1 receiver or really good No. 2 wideout. At other schools, Egbuka would have had an even bigger year, but he was the No. 2 receiver for Ohio State across from Marvin Harrison Jr. While injuries were a factor in 2023, Egbuka needs a bounce-back season in 2024 as he looked much faster in 2022 compared to his 2023 performance. Thus far in 2024, Egbuka has 70 catches for 896 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Round 2: Jonah Savaiinaea, OT, Arizona

Washington could use more right tackle talent.

Savaiinaea broke into the starting lineup at right tackle in 2022 and immediately was a solid contributor for the Wildcats. As a sophomore in 2023, Savaiinaea was even better teaming with Jordan Morgan to give Arizona an effective tackle tandem. Savaiinaea is not as good of an athlete as Morgan, but Savaiinaea is stronger, nastier, and looks to finish off defenders. Some area scouts are grading Savaiinaea on day two and think he should move inside to guard in the NFL. Other sources think he could be a late one and a good starting guard in the NFL. Thus, Savaiinaea is a bit of a love/hate prospect.

Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona

FOX Sports(Rang)

The Commanders are most likely addressing a good (but aging) defense with their first pick, but if the draft were to fall as projected here, the galloping 6-4, 219-pound McMillan might offer too much upside to ignore. He’s regarded by some as a top-10 candidate, offering a unique blend of size, body control and ball skills.

Round 2: Bradyn Swinson, Edge, LSU

Dan Quinn is one of the NFL’s better teachers of defensive line play, and he might see a lot of untapped potential in Swinson.

Pro Football Network(Decker)

The Commanders struck gold with head coach Dan Quinn and quarterback Jayden Daniels. Entering the offseason, it was clear they needed to add a weapon to complement Terry McLaurin. After acquiring Deebo Samuel via trade from the San Francisco 49ers, the Commanders get even richer with the 29th selection.

McMillan’s stock is dropping due to his average 40 time and recent comments that surfaced regarding his lack of love for the game and poor film-watching habits, which are concerning to some. Although these raise serious questions, there will be teams who feel comfortable with him, at least enough to take a chance.

At 6’5”, McMillan is the definition of a mismatch nightmare for defensive backs. He’s far more than a token red-zone weapon—he’s a smooth, polished receiver with excellent body control and the ability to transition in and out of breaks fluidly. He’s a physical player who craves the contested catch and is an elite tracker of the football.

McMillan is a plug-and-play receiver with legitimate upside. Placing him in an offense with McLaurin, Samuel, Ertz, and a strong running game gives the Commanders complete mismatches across the board, making life easier for everyone involved, most importantly their young franchise quarterback. This pick is a no-brainer.

Round 2: Carson Schwesinger, LB, UCLA

Fantasy Pros(Fanelli)

While the Commanders traded for Deebo Samuel Sr. and signed Michael Gallup out of retirement, that won’t stop them from adding a wide receiver early in the NFL Draft. McMillan provides the team with the one element they lack at wide receiver – size.

Trade: New York Jets receive pick 61. Washington Commanders receive picks 73, 145, 2026 fourth-rounder.

2nd round: Jack Sawyer, EDGE, Ohio State

Luther Burden III, WR, Missouri(Draft profile)

CBS Sports(Fornelli)

My gut tells me the shaky QB situation at Missouri in 2024 had an impact on Burden, and he’s much closer to the player we saw in 2023. If that’s true, this is an absolute steal for the Commanders, as Burden is a great YAC threat who could also be effective improvising when Jayden Daniels buys time with his legs.

NFL Spin Zone(Scataglia)

How about grabbing a younger and more explosive version of Deebo Samuel? After trading for the veteran WR this offseason, the Washington Commanders take Luther Burden III, who, like Samuel, is elite with the ball in his hands.

Roind 2: Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State

Football Guys(Brown)

Burden is electric with the ball in his hands and could be a perfect pairing with Jayden Daniels. The Missouri offense didn’t do him many favors, but his tape shows elite movement skills and natural hands. His 2023 tape is phenomenal, particularly his game against LSU, where Daniels was on the opposing team. In Kliff Kingsbury’s system, Burden would be unleashed as a motion-heavy, yards-after-catch nightmare — exactly the type of modern weapon you want to build around a young QB.

Walter Football

Another weapon for Jayden Daniels. The Redskins traded for Deebo Samuel, but given his age and injury history, it would be foolish not to add another receiver.

Luther Burden is a shifty receiver who can be used as a ball-carrier.

Round 2: Xavier Watts, S, Notre Dame

The Redskins have a hole in their secondary. They need a new safety to pair with Quan Martin.

Xavier Watts is a dangerous ballhawk who made lots of plays for Notre Dame.

Round 4: Donovan Edwards, RB, Michigan

The Redskins don’t have the best running game, so they could address this in the middle rounds.

Donovan Edwards has a great combination of size and speed.

TreVeyon Henderson, RB, Ohio State(Draft profile)

Pro Football Network

The Commanders wanted to land an edge rusher here, but GM Adam Peters looks elsewhere with all of the top prospects gone. Henderson fits the style of offense the Commanders run, and he is the type of player head coach Dan Quinn loves. In addition to being a game-breaker, he’s also not afraid to mix it up in pass protection. Henderson can help take this offense to another level, giving Jayden Daniels another weapon.

Stats & Insights Analysis: While not an obvious need for 2025, the Commanders don’t have a single running back under contract past this upcoming season. Drafting a running back in the first round would be a surprising outcome, but it wouldn’t be shocking to see Washington draft its future starter in this class.

Henderson is also the type of rookie running back that a contending team would feel comfortable playing right away, given his advanced pass protection skills. Jayden Daniels averaged a middling 0.06 EPA per dropback targeting RBs in 2024 (16th-highest), so Henderson could provide a meaningful boost in the passing game as well.

NFL Spin Zone(Bedinger)

There are a handful of running backs who are going to generate first-round hype late in the process here, and if you’re taking the over on 2.5 backs in the first, TreVeyon Henderson is likely to be one of the three (or more) off the board. Henderson was a star prospect who proved he’s not afraid of big moments early on in his college career. He’s an asset on all three downs, has home run ability, and would be a great fit for Kliff Kingsbury’s offense in Washington.

Round 2: JT Tuimoloau, EDGE, Ohio State

Fantasy Points(Gremminger)

Henderson landing in Washington would be a slam dunk for fantasy managers. Washington has the flexibility to swing for the fences with this pick. The Commanders addressed needs at wide receiver (Deebo Samuel), defensive tackle (Javon Kinlaw), and offensive tackle (Laremy Tunsil) this offseason, allowing them to take the best player available here. Henderson is an explosive runner who can also help Washington improve its yards after the catch as a receiver. He represents a clear talent upgrade over their current starter, Brian Robinson. Henderson would thrive alongside Jayden Daniels and carry RB1 potential in this offense.

Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina

Yahoo Sports(Tice/Robinson)

This might feel like a luxury pick given the Commanders’ needs elsewhere, but they would have some serious horsepower on offense with the addition of Hampton. He has been a star of the draft process coming off the backs of a dominant season running the ball for UNC. Hampton paired with Jayden Daniels would give the Commanders a chance to repeat last season and cement themselves as an elite running team for years to come.

CBS Sports(Edwards)

Most projections have Omarion Hampton off the board long before this stage of the first round. While that is likely, there is the possibility that he is available later than expected. Hampton gives Washington a three-down back that will take some of the pressure off Jayden Daniels.

NBC Sports(Rogers)

With an immense run on pure pass rushers before this pick, I’ll simply go best player available in Omarion Hampton (who is in the top 15 on my big board). He’s extremely physical in everything he does from between the tackles running, to creating after the catch, down to pass protection. Good luck stopping this offense.

Kelvin Banks, OT, Texas

The 33rd Team(Valentino)

Acquiring Laremy Tunsil from Houston was massive for Washington, but its quest for improvement shouldn’t end there. Right tackle Andrew Wylie is merely a temporary solution, and finding a sustainable long-term option should be a top priority.

Kelvin Banks has shown promise even with his raw technique, and this draft position presents an excellent opportunity to land someone with significant potential.

Trade down

Sharp Football Analysis(Donahue)

Trade terms: New England sends picks 38, 106, and 237 to Washington for the 29th overall selection(Matthew Golden, WR, Texas).

With only five picks in the draft, Washington moves down nine spots and picks up two extra picks in this draft. The Patriots miss out on Travis Hunter with their first pick so they get aggressive and go after Golden who had the fastest 40 time amongst all WR’s who tested at the combine with a 4.29.


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/10...ew-pick-for-the-washington-commanders-defense
 
Daily Slop - 11 Apr 25 - Say hello (again) to new Commanders (and former Redskins) QB Josh Johnson

Philadelphia Eagles v Washington Redskins

Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

ESPN

How the Commanders can help Jayden Daniels build on success


“The second year is a big challenge,” said Kansas City coach Andy Reid, who helped build on early success with quarterbacks Donovan McNabb in Philadelphia and Patrick Mahomes with the Chiefs. “If you can get through your second year, you got a pretty good thing going.”

The challenge stems from knowing that defensive coordinators will study him quite a bit this offseason, trying to figure out how best to defend against him.

Morris said it was difficult preparing for him as a rookie. He studied a player who went through his progressions as a passer and could hurt teams with his legs.

“When you play him, you realize how unstoppable he is with the four downs and having the ability to always have four downs because he’s so special that way,” Morris said. “His arm talent, his speed, his decision-making, his toughness, the high-level competitor, he’s all of those things.”

Protect him​


n three of the past four regular-season games, his sack percentage was 10.4 or higher and the pressure percentage 37.5 or greater. Washington knew that needed to change. So step one was finding a premium left tackle, eventually trading for five-time Pro Bowler Laremy Tunsil. That move allows Washington to shift promising young lineman Brandon Coleman, who started 15 games at left tackle last season as a rookie — including three in the playoffs — to the right side, trying him first at tackle.

Keep working​


Daniels, indeed, will focus on footwork during his offseason sessions with Ryan Porter, who has worked with him since he was 11 years old. Porter’s emphasis has always been footwork.

But, for Porter, it’s about introducing more drops than anything. He and Daniels want him to be able to use a different variety of drops to keep defensive backs guessing.

“Everybody has a year of film on him so now they’ll see different habits of what he does when he throws different [route] concepts,” Porter said. “It’s a timing thing for him if he’s able to throw the same route or concept from four different types of drops. You don’t get a tip or indicator from him and it’s just being able to play chess from the quarterback position where a lot of DBs are keying your drop or coordinators are keying your drop: ‘When he’s taking this drop, this is what he’s throwing.’ It’s just to sharpen your tools.”

Don’t overthink it​


Last season, the Commanders ran 677 no-huddle plays — not all were part of a hurry-up offense. That was 403 snaps more than the next-highest team, Philadelphia. Daniels does his part by how much he studies the playbook during the week, allowing him to run this attack efficiently. It also helps simplify a defense.

Cincinnati Bengals coach Zac Taylor said he learned when building on quarterback Joe Burrow ‘s early success that, “You got your bread-and-butter stuff that you really like and enjoy and you want to continue to do that. No one can ever take it away. ...Then, what are the wrinkles in the stuff you do.”


Bullock’s Film Room (subscription)​

NFL Draft Profile: RB Bhayshul Tuten


I think Virginia Tech running back Bhayshul Tuten would make a lot of sense for the Commanders on day three of the draft. Tuten is EXPLOSIVE and I don’t use all caps lightly. He’s short but fairly stocky for his size at 5-foot-9, 206 pounds, but he has game-breaking speed. He ran a 4.32 40-yard dash at the combine, which was the fastest of any running back in this class and the fifth fastest time of any position this year. His 1.49 10-yard split was joint fastest of anyone at the combine regardless of position. He was also one of the top performers for broad and vertical jump, which also measures explosiveness. So clearly, he’s an outstanding athlete, but does it translate to the football field? Yes, it does.

Tuten has the speed and explosiveness to score from anywhere on the field any time he touches the ball. The situation doesn’t matter, it can be first and 10 or third and short, if the ball is in his hands and the defense makes a slight mistake, he can punish them.

Tuten is someone that is capable of running between the tackles and fighting through contact, but with his explosiveness I think anyone that drafts him would rather find ways to get him the ball on the edge, where he can make defenders miss and use his speed to run by defenders.


Riggo’s Rag

Jeremy Chinn aiming for similar success after Commanders’ departure


As for Chinn? He’s looking to replicate Washington’s exceptional turnaround in Las Vegas. The Southern Illinois graduate highlighted the culture and brotherhood formed by the Commanders as a big reason behind the team’s sensational run. But the intrigue of being deployed within Pete Carroll’s defense was too tempting to turn down.

“Last year, I would say one of the big things that was done there, was culturally and inside. There was definitely a shift. But also, I think the players really came together. There was a great level of leadership. A great brotherhood that we created, and I truly believe that can happen here as well. Just hearing coach [Pette] Carroll’s plan, how he saw me featured in his defense and his team. That was very intriguing for me.”

Jeremy Chinn via Raiders.com

Carroll and Quinn worked together with great success. They masterminded the renowned Legion of Boom defense on the Seattle Seahawks en route to a Super Bowl. Chinn was a great fit in Washington. He’ll be a great fit for the Raiders as a hard-hitting, athletic presence in a similar mold to Kam Chancellor.


Podcasts & videos


My updated first-round NFL mock draft:
* Insight and analysis for all 32 picks (plus trades)
* How earlier picks affect the Commanders at 29 and beyond
* Why the Tunsil trade looks better after going through this process

Also, some podcast news.https://t.co/BuU59hl7d5

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) April 10, 2025

NFC East links

Blogging the Boys

An improved Dak Prescott is an absolute must for the Cowboys this upcoming season


The Cowboys have a lot of questions entering the new year, and the performance of their quarterback is one of them.

One element that isn’t talked about is the capability of Prescott. Don’t get us wrong, the Cowboys quarterback is the most polarizing player on the roster, and there are non-stop discussions about whether he’s the guy or not. Mostly, in this debate, there’s not a lot of middle ground. You either love him or want him gone.

But there is a third category that acknowledges that Prescott is a very good quarterback but also questions his performance at times. We know there are times he can light up the stat sheet and wreak havoc over NFC East teams, but what about other times when the rubber meets the road? Why does he get so frazzled at big moments? Is there something awry with his psyche in those moments?

Prescott played eight games last year. The Cowboys lost five of those games. After Dak went down, the Cowboys kept losing games, but it didn’t get worse. It actually got better. The team had a slightly better winning percentage with Cooper Rush than Prescott. Of course, a lot of factors go into winning games, not just who’s playing quarterback.

He had the lowest touchdown percentage (3.8%) of his nine-year career. You’d have to go back 20 years to find a starting Cowboys quarterback who had a lower TD% than what Prescott had last season (Vinny Testaverde, 2004). He had the lowest yards-per-completion average (10.7) of his career. You’d have to go back to the turn of the century to find a starting quarterback with a lower average as not even Testaverde or Quincy Carter had seasons that low.

And if you think he was being too careful with the ball, that wasn’t it either. He was averaging an interception a game, which put him on pace to throw 17 picks for the season, two more than he had in 2022 when he led the NFL in interceptions. So, with low touchdowns, high picks, and low yards per completion, it shouldn’t be surprising that he finished with the lowest passer rating of his career.

And his season wasn’t a journey of highs and lows. When Prescott and the offense came out flat, they would fall behind in a hurry and usually end up on the losing end of a blowout. When they played okay, it usually came down to the wire. Gone were those big Prescott games where he would light things up and put up a 3+ touchdown game. Like, completely gone. Prescott had none of those games last year.


Big Blue View

Abdul Carter stress reaction called a ‘non-factor’


Carter visiting Giants after medical re-check

Before he headed to East Rutherford, N.J. on Thursday for his highly-anticipated ‘30 visit’ with the New York Giants, Penn State edge defender Abdul Carter went to Indianapolis for a recheck of the stress reaction in his foot.

Carter reportedly got good news.

Per ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter, Carter’s foot is healing and no surgery will be needed.

“It should be a non-factor with the teams at this point,” Carter’s agent, Drew Rosenhaus, said.

Recent mock drafts have trended toward giving Carter to the Giants with the third overall pick.


NFL league links

Articles​

ESPN

2025 NFL draft buzz: Late risers, Day 2 sleepers, mini-mocks

What’s the most fascinating thing you heard off pro day workouts?​


Yates: The number of evaluators who are unbothered by Will Campbell’s arm length really stands out to me. I was hard pressed to find an exec or coach who doesn’t view LSU’s Campbell as the best tackle of this class, and those same people told me his length wasn’t a concern on tape. I’m not ignoring his 32-inch arm length from the combine, but most people I talked to are bullish on Campbell becoming a really good left tackle. He has excellent footwork, balance and body control to hold up as a pass protector.

Miller: Of the hundreds of players who went through pro day workouts, the most rave reviews I’ve heard are for Ole Miss defensive tackle Walter Nolen. Following a strong predraft process, people from some teams now tell me Nolen looks like a Round 1 lock and a potential top-20 player. Ranked No. 20 on my final board, Nolen is the best pure pass rusher in the defensive tackle group. Teams in the middle of the first round like Arizona, Cincinnati and Atlanta could all be targets for him.

Reid: Coming out of pro days, the league is still very high on this running back class. I currently have 32 running backs with draftable grades on my board, and this year could surpass the 2017 mark of 30 rushers drafted. This also makes for any interesting scenario in the first two rounds. Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty could go as high as No. 6 to the Raiders, but when will a second rusher come off the board? North Carolina’s Omarion Hampton could be next, but a high-ranked executive told me this about the class: “I can draft another position and still come back and get a running back in this class in the third or fourth round because it’s so loaded.”


Front Office Sports

NFL Schedule Set to Drop in May—With Major Changes in Store


“Somewhere in the May 13, 14, or 15 range is probably still our target,” said NFL VP of broadcast planning and scheduling Mike North this week on the It’s Always Gameday in Buffalo podcast.

This year’s schedule, however, will contemplate several additional factors, making its construction more complex than ever. Among the additional issues:


Discussion topics

The Athletic (paywall)​

‘It’s a unique landscape’: College football’s transfer boom transforms NFL Draft evaluations


“We were talking to a player who has been to three different schools, and he’s 25 years old, married with two kids,” Fontenot said. “It’s just a different level from when you were seeing 20-year-olds who played three years at one school.”

The era of mass transferring in college football, fueled by name, image and likeness deals and loosened restrictions on when a player can switch schools, has changed how NFL teams evaluate players who hope to be drafted.

The Falcons last season drafted one of 14 players in the first two rounds (quarterback Michael Penix Jr.) who played for at least two four-year colleges. When Fontenot entered the NFL as a scout with the New Orleans Saints in 2003, only one player among the top 64 drafted had played for multiple universities.

Nineteen of the 37 players drafted in the seventh round in 2024, for example, played for multiple universities. That included safety Daijahn Anthony, the 224th pick by the Cincinnati Bengals, who played at three schools in five years and was 24 when his rookie season began. Delaying entry into the NFL Draft has become especially appealing for players projected to land near the back of the draft pool. That’s because a player can transfer to a school offering more in a one-year NIL deal than he would make on the first year of his NFL contract as a late-round pick or undrafted free agent.

“In years past, before all these guys transferred, you’d have two, three, four years of information-gathering on a player if you’re an area scout. Let’s say you’re the Southwest area scout and you’re building four years’ worth of a profile on a player. Well, now these guys transfer — usually at least once; sometimes twice — and now there is gaps in the information.

“The assistant coaches don’t know them as well. You don’t have the same depth of character evaluation that you maybe had before. So it’s a changing landscape that our guys, just like everyone across the league, are adapting to. There is an effect on how well you can know a player when they’ve jumped two or three times.”

Others see mass transferring as a boon to the information-gathering business. Broncos coach Sean Payton pointed to his team’s first-round pick in 2024, quarterback Bo Nix, as a prime example.

“From a scouting standpoint, it does give you more exposure to more people who are familiar with the player,” Payton said. “Some programs are more guarded with information.”

The great migration in college football has had another benefit for NFL teams trying to create a vision for what the players they are evaluating can become at the pro level. Players who compete for multiple schools end up playing in different schemes. Their roles and even their positions can change. It can create a more diverse patchwork of film for teams to evaluate.

[T]he transfer era has negatively impacted some prospects when it comes to their NFL readiness.

“We’re getting underdeveloped players, at times, because of their transfers,” Canales said. “Physically underdeveloped, as well. They are with this strength coach and now they’re not even with a team for a spring. Now, they are with that strength coach for the fall. You can’t really get that much stronger during the season when you’re playing and recovering. So players are missing out on critical physical development periods. During summer and other parts of the offseason, they’re not with teams.”


Barstool Sports

The NFL Has Fired 3 Referees, But Making Their Officials Full Time Should Really Be Addressed


While this is a good start, the real problem at hand here is these refs being part time, which has always been weird to me. The league generates billions of dollars, and is only getting richer. The league has found a way to dominate the sports calendar year over year, from the actual season, into free agency, into minicamps, into the draft, into the schedule release, into camp, and back to the preseason. The NFL is a year round storyline. Turn on any sports network at any point in the year and they are bound to find an NFL story or debate in the time slot. Which makes you wonder, why wouldn’t they just make the refs full time? They have the money to do it. It would allow the refs to have to devote more time to the game, whether it’s conferences, training sessions, or whatever. The refs would only get better. Again, this is a decent start to a massive problem in the league, and we can only hope that more moves are coming down the pike.



Louis Riddick on Shedeur Sanders: "This young man's going to be just fine. And you know what? I hope he doesn't go in the top three picks. I hope he doesn't. And I think his camp would tell you the same thing. There are other teams they want to go to." pic.twitter.com/KQ6HtlgZcy

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) April 9, 2025

All aTwitter


Running it back at @NationalHarbor for this year's draft party @Seatgeek | #RaiseHail

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 9, 2025

Josh Johnson’s career has been WILD

he was a 5th rd draft pick in 2008

he's now played on an NFL record 15 teams

he turns 39 in May

he’ll be a Commander for his 18th season

across his 17 seasons in the NFL:

he's made just $12,008,414 & has started only 9 games (1-8 record) https://t.co/rK8VeBI3Ec pic.twitter.com/EdjMFJPgLp

— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) April 11, 2025

The Commanders' QB room entering the draft:

Jayden Daniels
Marcus Mariota
Josh Johnson
Sam Hartman

4 is the magic QB number for the offseason program, so Washington is set if it wants to be.

— Ben Standig (@BenStandig) April 11, 2025

Josh Johnson's career path is wild.

Add a return to Washington to this list. pic.twitter.com/y8bsbs5ofJ

— Sarah Ellison (@sgellison) April 11, 2025

The Washington Commanders are signing QB Josh Johnson. He’ll be doing a presser with media later today.

I was just sharing on Monday’s show about the team keeping four QBs between the active roster and practice squad. Looks to be the same/similar approach so far this year.

— CWallSports (@cwallse) April 11, 2025

Take notes for your mock drafts @Microsoft | #RaiseHail

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 10, 2025

Trench Talk! On this week's "All Ears with JP Finlay," @JPFinlayNBCS breaks down the changes on the #Commanders D-line and O-line, here's a preview#RaiseHail

Full show here: https://t.co/veQCRF1ABs pic.twitter.com/kar4TbfHl8

— NBC4 Sports (@NBC4Sports) April 10, 2025

This dude is so bad. “Just in”. Joke. Has been well known they’d like to add another RB to go along with Robinson and Ekeler. Could be a pick in rounds 1 or 2; could be one later or perhaps none at all. The “shots fired” is juvenile. Carry on. pic.twitter.com/RVpFUtGFH1

— John Keim (@john_keim) April 11, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/3W4YGibfAB

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 10, 2025

New Alex Ovechkin bobbleheads from @FOCOusa added to celebrate the Gr8 One's scoring record!https://t.co/Wh7UEYhUe8 https://t.co/gU0TZzdUEF pic.twitter.com/BJisf6CN3E

— COMMANDERS FOOTBALL (@HogsHaven) April 9, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/11...ommanders-and-former-redskins-qb-josh-johnson
 
Commanders fans are bullish about 2025 win total; expecting Adam Peters to draft more offensive help for Jayden Daniels

adam_peters_cooking.0.jpg


Survey results!!

My, how times have changed in Washington!

Ron Rivera spent his first three seasons in DC trying to “change the culture” that had been established by Jay Gruden under the direction of Bruce Allen and the previous owner. As head coach, he was moderately successful; as the top personnel decision-maker, he was atrocious. He left behind a smoldering wreck of a roster. Today, only 6 players remain on the Commanders roster from Rivera’s 4 drafts. None of his 4 first-round picks are still with the team.

Ron’s final season in charge was 2023, which is the year the ownership changed. With the sale being finalized just before the start of training camp, new owner Josh Harris took a bit of a ‘hands off’ approach to most football operations, and 2023 ended up as a “lost” year, with the Commanders finishing 4-13 and arguably playing the worst football in the league by mid-December.

Last year, 2024, will likely end up being remembered as the most pivotal in the history of the franchise. Josh Harris became very “hands on”. He hired Adam Peters to be the General Manager of the team, and empowered him to take total control of football operations. Peters hired Dan Quinn as the head coach, fully empowering him to build a championship coaching staff, before selecting QB Jayden Daniels #2 overall in last April’s draft.

Very little went wrong in 2024. There was a 3-game mid-season losing streak that was probably caused mostly by a JD5 rib injury, and, of course, the 55-23 loss to the Eagles in the NFC Championship Game, but the Commanders won 12 regular season games for the first time in 33 years, and had two significant playoff victories that came against the Buccaneers and (especially) the Lions, who were considered by many to be the favorites to win the NFC championship.

Expectations for the upcoming season​


Confidence breeds success and success breeds confidence, so nowadays, Commanders fans are expecting more from the team than they have in many years.

In this week’s Reacts survey, we asked Hogs Haven readers to pick the over or under against the betting line set by FanDuel of 9.5 wins for the upcoming 2025 season.

The response was pretty lopsided.



Check the odds at FanDuel



Nearly 9 out of every 10 respondents took the “over”, which was not the least bit surprising. Not only will Jayden Daniels return for his second NFL season as the reigning Offensive Rookie of the Year, he will do so as the leader of a beefed-up offense thanks primarily to a pair of offseason trades that added Laremy Tunsil — one of the best left tackles in the NFL — and Deebo Samuel, an explosive offensive weapon who seems custom-made for the Kliff Kingsbury offense that we saw debuted in 2024.

Adam Peters has also re-made the defense via free agency this offseason, primarily focusing on the defensive line, seemingly in an effort to bolster the run defense after Washington ranked 30th in the NFL in ‘24, giving up an average of 137.5 rush yards per game. This was probably seen as an even more urgent priority because Washington has to solve the problem of a Saquon Barkley-led Eagles rushing attack in order to win the NFC East division and move beyond the NFC Championship Game.

Washington will face a much tougher schedule in 2025, but it will do so with several advantages.

Firstly, the Commanders won’t be spotting the NFL an opening-week loss like they did a year ago when the new head coach with a rookie quarterback and totally remade roster traveled to Tampa Bay to take on an experienced playoff team and an almost automatic “L”. This year, Washington should be the hunter and not the hunted in September games.

Secondly, the home field advantage that the Commanders rode to a 7-2 record in 2024 should be more advantageous this season as newly inspired fans become first-time season ticket holders who will cheer for the good guys and make life tougher for the bad guys eight times in the 2025 regular season, and hopefully at least once or twice in the playoffs.

Washington will also benefit from an established identity and a returning core of players that set a foundation for the roster. While there has been a lot of commentary on Adam Peters’ heavy use of one-year contracts in his efforts to re-build the decimated roster that he inherited, it’s been largely overlooked that the GM extended at least 17 players who finished the ‘24 season on expiring contracts. This means that there is a lot more roster stability than many NFL observers realize. While the 2024 Commanders entered the May and June offseason program as a group of coaches and players who were mostly unfamiliar with one another, they ended the season as a cohesive group of over-achievers who carry a winning identity forward into 2025. The foundation is built; now the task is to raise the ceiling.

The upcoming draft​


As mentioned, part of the work of raising the ceiling was accomplished via veteran free agency signings and two key trades, but the work isn’t over. We’re only about 12 days away from the NFL draft, which starts on Thursday April 24th in Green Bay.

Washington currently has five draft picks, with only three inside the first 200 picks.



The roster appears to need more work on the defensive side of the ball, and the current roster composition is weighted towards the offense, with 40 offensive players (including QB Josh Johnson, whose signing was publicly reported this week) and just 32 defensive players.

In our Reacts survey this week, our second question asked how many OFFENSIVE players would be selected by the Commanders in the first five rounds of draft (the top 176 picks).

The results are a bit surprising.



With only three picks in the first 5 rounds in hand, more than half of Hogs Haven readers who responded to this survey said that the Commanders would pick two offensive players.

This seems a bit counter-intuitive at first blush, but it makes a lot more sense in the context of fan expectations. In short, a lot of people expect Adam Peters to parlay the 29th overall pick (and maybe more) into additional picks by trading out of the first round on Day 1 of this month’s draft.

Many respondents are expecting Peters to have 4 or more picks in the first 5 rounds. Of those surveyed, 89% expect AP to use one or two of them on offense, most likely selecting a wide receiver, running back or offensive lineman. If AP does trade down, that would still leave two or more picks available to address needs on the defensive side of the ball, most likely by focusing on edge rusher, cornerback or safety.

Whatever strategy unfolds, the job Adam Peters did in his inaugural season as Washington GM has earned him a lot of goodwill and trust among the Washington fan base, who seem perfectly willing to sit back and let Adam cook.



Join our partner FanDuel for all your betting needs



Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/12...win-total-expect-adam-peters-to-draft-offense
 
Daily Slop - 12 Apr 25 - Thirty minutes one-on-one with Commanders GM Adam Peters

temp_AP.0.jpg


A collection of articles, podcasts & tweets from around the web to keep you in touch with the Commanders, the NFC East, the NFL and sports in general, and a sprinkling of other stuff

Commanders links

Articles​

Sports Illustrated​

If Kliff Kingsbury had left the Commanders, Dan Quinn had a plan


“It was part of the interview here, I told (managing partner) Josh Harris, we were going to have a deep crew because I expect us to do well, and when we do, people are going to leave. ...(And) I’d rather promote from within,” Quinn said in an appearance on the Glue Guys Podcast. “So we’ve got some heavy hitters on our staff that stayed when they could have left, even this year. And that really made me happy knowing that they had some unfinished business here. And that made me happy to know that if they had left, there were other people that were ready for that too.”

“I can say now that I’m in the 2.0 version of my head coaching spot, the coaching staff that I came in with in Atlanta was stronger than the one that I left with. And that’s a bad thing,” Quinn said. “I didn’t do a good enough job of working the succession plan of who should be next into this spot and who should be next into this spot. And I’m not taking a shot at anybody. I’m saying the only shot taken there is me. And so the development of coaches is just as important as the development of players.”


Commanders.com

Noah Brown ‘completely ready to go’ for Commanders


[T]he veteran wideout is returning to the Burgundy & Gold, about a month removed from being cleared by doctors, and excited to have an even greater impact.

“I’m just training and taking the offseason...as if I finished the season healthy,” Brown told reporters after re-signing with Washington on a one-year deal. “I’m completely ready to go.”

Brown’s kidney injury occurred in Week 13 against the Tennessee Titans — a game the Commanders won handedly, 42-19, and broke their three-week losing skid before their bye week. Brown initially thought that he had gotten the wind knocked out of him and was warming up to get back on the field when he realized that it could be something more serious.

Brown went to the locker room and did not return to the action. About a week later, head coach Dan Quinn said Brown would likely miss the rest of the season with a “significant” internal injury. Brown described the weeks after as “a rough time for me” but added that it wasn’t the first time he had to miss extended time with an injury.


Washington Post (paywall)​

Washington signs QB Josh Johnson to a one-year deal


The 38-year-old veteran returns to provide depth and competition behind Jayden Daniels and Marcus Mariota.

Johnson adds depth to Washington’s quarterbacks room behind Jayden Daniels and Marcus Mariota and competition for the third spot with Sam Hartman, a second-year undrafted quarterback who spent much of last season on the practice squad. (The team did not re-sign former third-string quarterback Jeff Driskel in free agency.)

He has been with a league-record 14 NFL teams — five multiple times — and played in both the XFL (2020) and the United Football League (2012). His return to Washington is the 25th time he has changed pro teams.

Johnson, who will turn 39 in May, first signed with Washington in 2018 after the team lost Colt McCoy and Alex Smith to season-ending injuries. After taking over for Mark Sanchez late in a blowout loss to the New York Giants, Johnson started the final three games of the season, earning his first win against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Washington’s playoff hopes that season ended with losses in its final two games.

Johnson has started only one game since he left Washington — he threw for 304 yards and two touchdowns with an interception in place of Lamar Jackson in a Baltimore Ravens loss to the Cincinnati Bengals in 2021 — but spent time with five franchises. Twice in that span, he signed with the San Francisco 49ers, when Commanders General Manager Adam Peters was their vice president of player personnel.

Johnson already has some ties with the new group, beyond Peters. He played with assistant quarterbacks coach David Blough on the Detroit Lions in 2019, and Jim Harbaugh coached both Johnson (San Diego) and Commanders quarterbacks coach Tavita Pritchard (Stanford) in college.


Commanders Wire

Commanders work out All-American kicker


Despite re-signing Zane Gonzalez for next season, Washington worked out top kicking prospect Andres Borregales earlier this month. Borregales made 18 of his 19 field goal attempts during his final season at Miami, including a long of 56 yards.

Borregales isn’t the only top kicker prospect the Commanders worked out. According to Justin Melo of The Draft Network, Washington worked out Florida State kicker Ryan Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald also said he’s had workouts with the New England Patriots and Baltimore Ravens.


Chicago Sun Times

Caleb Williams: Bears were ‘annoyed’ by Matt Eberflus’ handling of Hail Mary loss


Eberflus said after the game that the sideline completions by the Commanders didn’t matter, even though an incompletion on the penultimate pass would’ve made it impossible for Daniels to throw into the end zone.

“How [Eberflus] handled it at that time, for that game, was, I think, one of the things that throughout the locker room people talked about and were annoyed by,” Williams told the magazine.

The Bears fired Eberflus the next month after another late-game gaffe in Detroit. The players were annoyed then, too. Cornerback Jaylon Johnson barked at the coaching staff after Eberflus refused to take a timeout as the clock expired.

Williams appeared on the cover of the “Mavericks of Sports” edition of the magazine wearing a pink-and-maroon rugby shirt and plaid overcoat. His comments to Esquire were the first time he has talked publicly about the players’ annoyance with Eberflus, though he said at Halas Hall three days after the Hail Mary loss that “right in that moment, you’re angry . . . you’re furious that you lost and you lost in that way.”

The Bears lost 10 games in a row during Williams’ rookie year — under Eberflus and interim coach Thomas Brown — before winning the season finale at Lambeau Field.

Williams told Esquire he was “so beat up mentally, physically [and] spiritually” by the late-season losses.

“When I got home, I got in my bed, I just dropped a few tears,” he said.


Podcasts & videos

Field Talk: Washington Commanders GM Adam Peters​


Washington Commanders “Biggest” Hits of The 2024-25 NFL Season​


NFC East links

ESPN

Eagles current state of affairs: Free agency moves, draft prospects


The pain has been felt over the last handful of weeks through the departure of a number of veteran contributors. The Eagles traded starting safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson to the Houston Texans, released Pro Bowl cornerback Darius Slay Jr., and let defensive tackle Milton Williams, guard Mekhi Becton and edge rusher Josh Sweat, among others, walk in free agency.

Meanwhile, league sources confirmed tight end Dallas Goedert has been the subject of trade talks. The combination of his age (30), injury history and average salary of $14 million per season has the Eagles considering moving on from their leading receiver from this past postseason.

There also have been some additions, such as the signings of edge rushers Azeez Ojulari and Joshua Uche, cornerback Adoree’ Jackson and running back AJ Dillon to one-year deals. But it’s pretty clear heading into the draft that the Eagles have taken a step back from a talent standpoint so far this offseason, leading to a number of important questions for the defending champs, none bigger than: Do they remain in good position for a repeat?

Why are they parting with so many good players?​


Budgeting for those future salaries meant making some tough decisions on players who helped deliver a Lombardi Trophy such as Sweat (four years, $76 million with the Cardinals) and Williams (four years, $104 million with the Patriots), who signed large contracts in March.

“If you look at our drafts from 2022 to 2024, we had eight starters in the Super Bowl from those drafts and zero of them have long-term contracts,” general manager Howie Roseman said. “As we stand right now, we have 20 picks in the 2025 and 2026 drafts. So, we are going to need some of those roster spots for younger players. We’re trying to balance having the best possible team we can have this year and also acknowledging that there is a transition with the middle to back of our roster and that we are going to have some younger players here.”

The Eagles currently have eight 2025 draft picks, including four selections in the fifth round.

They are projected to have 12 picks in 2026, including three in the third round, in part because of compensation picks expected to be awarded for the departures of Williams, Sweat and Becton.


NFL league links

Articles​

NFL.com

Buccaneers GM Jason Licht: ‘Leveled-out’ nature of 2025 draft class could lead to fewer trades


Tampa Bay Buccaneers general manager Jason Licht believes there could be less action this year.

“You can’t walk into it saying, ‘I am definitely looking to trade back,’ because you don’t know what’s going to fall to you. I do think this year is going to be — I could be wrong — you’re going to see maybe a little less people maybe wanting to move up and offering enough to make it worth your while just because the draft is pretty leveled-out at a certain point,” Licht said, via the team’s official transcript. “You might be able to get the same level of player in the second round as you can in the fourth round at certain positions, so I think you’ll maybe see a little bit less of that.”

Fewer high-end quarterbacks in this class might immediately curtail trades — will teams attempt to trade back into the end of the first round for a potential borderline signal-caller? Viewed as a meat-and-potatoes draft, clubs could have vastly different boards than other years.


Front Office Sports

NFL’s Helmet Evolution Continues: Several More Models Are Banned


The league saw a historic reduction in on-field concussions last season. Accelerating improvements in helmet technology are seen as a critical step to maintain that momentum in player safety.

The league released the results of its annual helmet performance and safety study Friday, conducted with the NFL Players Association, and is banning seven additional models for next season. Three others have been moved to a “not recommended” category, but notably, all 10 models in question were deemed top performers by the league as recently as 2022.

Taking their place are a series of upgraded helmets that include more force absorption and additional customization for individual positions. Ten recommended helmet models now perform well enough that they are considered “Guardian Cap optional,” exempting players with those helmets from also using the caps during training camp and practice.

The results arrive as the league saw during the 2024 season its lowest recorded number of concussions, with a 17% reduction from 2023. The NFL’s move last season to the dynamic kickoff, made permanent at last week’s annual league meeting, and the reduced speed of player impacts in that play is a significant factor in the reduction of concussions. So, too, is the accelerating pace of helmet technology, as well as the increasing acceptance of the use of Guardian Caps.

“While we’re thrilled that we saw the fewest number of concussions ever in the NFL last year, we believe that based on equipment alone, we can see an enhanced ability to protect players this season,” Miller said.


Discussion topics

Commanders Wire

Could the Saints call the Commanders after recent quarterback injury news?


If Carr can’t play in 2025, the Saints need a veteran quickly. Might they go after Aaron Rodgers as a one-year plug-in? Rodgers can still play, and the Saints might be interested, but do we know if Rodgers wants to play in New Orleans?

If the Saints are unable to get Rodgers, would they make an offer to the Commanders for Marcus Mariota? Mariota displayed last season that he can still play. He made several big plays in the win over the Panthers. In addition, Mariota frankly rescued the Commanders from an embarrassing offensive performance in the season finale against the Cowboys.

The Saints own the No. 9 overall pick in this upcoming draft. Perhaps the Carr injury forces the Saints to feel they need to select Colorado QB Shedeur Sanders with that pick? But would it be wise to give the team to Sanders in 2025? Is he ready to jump right in and start?

The Saints need a veteran quarterback unless they tank the season in hopes of landing a much better quarterback next offseason. Meanwhile, Mariota can still play, the Saints know it, and they might give Commanders GM Adam Peters a call. Peters might say, “What are you willing to offer me?”


All aTwitter


We have signed QB Josh Johnson pic.twitter.com/yIjwh9Kc9W

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 11, 2025

Rick Snider’s Washington says the Washington Commanders have once again signed the most implausible quarterback of all. Gimme two minutes. pic.twitter.com/GTbZOTenvh

— Rick Snider's Washington (@Snide_Remarks) April 11, 2025

Throwback to Josh Johnson’s first win as a starter in 2018 #RaiseHail pic.twitter.com/QHo2DVHeNC

— SleeperCommanders (@SleeperWSH) April 11, 2025


The #Saints suddenly have a major QB question: Starter Derek Carr is now dealing with a shoulder injury that threatens his availability for this season, sources say.

Carr is weighing options, including the possibility of surgery. pic.twitter.com/QNdc9ipE8P

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) April 11, 2025

From The Insiders on @NFLNetwork: The #Saints now have a major QB question thanks to Derek Carr's shoulder injury. pic.twitter.com/0set0CmlAb

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) April 11, 2025

Difficult to overstate how bad of a decision it was for the 2023 New Orleans Saints to sign 32-year-old Derek Carr to a 4-year, $150,000,000 contract

— Benjamin Solak (@BenjaminSolak) April 11, 2025

In four days, the Saints have moved from +300 favorites to pick QB Shedeur Sanders to -130. https://t.co/mRAZZMC9vS

— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) April 12, 2025


posting a photo from last season every day until OTAs pic.twitter.com/WXq47DvjXO

— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 11, 2025


Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/12...tes-one-on-one-with-commanders-gm-adam-peters
 
College Football’s YAC King Jamaal Pritchett Looks Like a Fit for the Commanders’ Offense

South Alabama v Appalachian State

Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images

Hogs Haven takes a look at 2025 NFL Draft prospects that could contribute to the Commanders

Jamaal Pritchett, WR
School:
South Alabama | Conference: Sun Belt
College Experience: Senior | Age: ?
Height / Weight:
5’8” / 166 lbs
Projected Draft Status: 7th Round-UDFA

Player Comparison: Jacob Cowing/Greg Dortch

College Statistics

ReceivingRushingScrimmage
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGRecYdsY/RTDY/GAttYdsY/ATDY/GPlaysYdsAvgTDAwards
2022*South AlabamaSun BeltFRWR822412.003.00000.022412.00
2023*South AlabamaSun BeltSOWR135788315.5867.90000.05788315.58
2024*South AlabamaSun BeltSRWR1291112712.4993.9133.000.392113012.39
Career33150203413.61761.6133.000.1151203713.517

Receiving & Rushing Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 4/9/2025.
Punt ReturnsKick Returns
SeasonTeamConfClassPosGRetYdsY/RetPRTDRetYdsY/RetKRTDAPYdAwards
2022*South AlabamaSun BeltFRWR822512.5011313.0062
2023*South AlabamaSun BeltSOWR1334214.0011313.00938
2024*South AlabamaSun BeltSRWR121218315.310001313
Career331725014.7122613.002313

Punt & Kick Returns Table
Provided by CFB at Sports Reference: View Original Table
Generated 4/9/2025.

Player Overview


Jamaal Pritchett, an Alabama native, began his college career at Tuskegee University in 2021. After making 27 catches for 488 yards and three touchdowns, he wanted to challenge himself against better competition. This led to him transferring to South Alabama and walking on to the football team. He made the team, but saw very little action in 2022. The next year, Pritchett broke out. His eight touchdown receptions led the Jaguars and earned him an All-Sun Belt Honorable Mention. For his last season in Mobile, Pritchett topped 1,000 yards on 91 catches, leading the nation in yards after the catch with 759. He was named All-Sun Belt First Team after being one of the most productive receivers in college.

Strengths

  • Has speed to beat defenders deep and outrun angles
  • Hands are reliable with very good ball tracking
  • Extends catch radius with vertical leap, showing good body control
  • Excels after the catch; a tough runner considering his size
  • Added value as a returner

Weaknesses

  • Often schemed open off of motion
  • Not a lot of reps where he beats press coverage
  • Would like to see more diversity in his routes
  • Struggles as a blocker

Let’s See His Work


South Alabama’s Jamaal Pritchett with some wicked ball tracking in the 68 Ventures Bowl.

The sophomore keeps creating major separation. Has 122 yards and two scores on eight receptions in the first half. pic.twitter.com/A05utn8Vy8

— Bobby Football (@Rob__Paul) December 24, 2023

Carter Bradley ➡️ Jamaal Pritchett = another TD ‼️#LEO pic.twitter.com/mrsD6F6TtM

— South Alabama Football (@SouthAlabamaFB) November 11, 2023

Among the 2025 draft-eligible wide receiver prospects that had a slot route percentage of 25% or higher, four averaged 2.25 receiving yards per team attempt in 2024 AND their career.

-Jamaal Pritchett
-Efton Chism III
-Ricky White
-Jayden Higgins

Pritchett and Chism saw 70%… pic.twitter.com/w7t4FBn0PM

— Corbin (@corbin_young21) February 13, 2025

Man: Tre Harris, Ole Miss
Zone: Jamaal Pritchett, South Alabama

2025 NFL Draft: Highest Graded WRs Vs Man & Zone Coverages⬇️https://t.co/QCTMyczryW

— PFF College (@PFF_College) April 1, 2025

Washington Commanders work out PFF's highest graded wide receiver draft prospect https://t.co/uHethghCsY pic.twitter.com/nBYXFCBlJp

— Commanders Wire (@Washington_Wire) April 8, 2025

How does he fit on the team


Kliff Kingsbury runs an offense that likes to get the ball out quickly to playmakers and let them make plays. Players like Terry McLaurin, Deebo Samuel, and Austin Ekeler can thrive in a system like this. Even a player like Dyami Brown found success late in the season turning short passes into long gains. With his and Olamide Zaccheaus’ departure and Jamison Crowder not being re-signed, the team could be looking for more options that provide yards after the catch.

Jamaal Pritchett made his mark last season with his play after the catch. While a lot of that was based on scheme, the attributes that Pritchett possesses help him find success with the ball in his hands. He has good speed and quickness and is tougher to bring down than his size suggests. His size will limit him to the slot, but a creative offensive mind can find ways for Pritchett to contribute. Kingsbury has utilized smaller receivers such as Greg Dortch in the short and intermediate area of the field, and Pritchett could develop into that role. He is likely to provide depth at the slot receiver position with the chance to be the team’s punt returner.

Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/12...e-a-fit-for-the-washington-commanders-offense
 
Can a game-changing running back make a good Commanders team great?

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Kyle Robertson/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Most fans and media talking-heads will agree that Washington has a pretty good football team. Much of that centered around the phenomenal play of rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels in 2024, but there are other factors too.

New general manger Adam Peters brought in players with high football IQ’s, leadership skills, big-game experience and talent. Head coach Dan Quinn instilled a sense of brotherhood and accountability in the locker room and that carried over to the field. Offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury tailored an offense around the strengths of his rookie passer, instead of the previous regime trying to force a square peg into a round hole.

All of the aforementioned played a huge role in a turn-around from a 4-13 season in 2023 to a 12-5 record, and a spot in the NFC Championship game, last year.

Still, there is work to be done to take this team to another level...


Some big improvements this offseason:


One of the biggest focuses this offseason was to bolster the defensive front in an attempt to stop teams from running all over Washington in 2025, and to improve the offensive line to help protect Jayden Daniels and open up the run game.

The defensive line saw the release of Jonathan Allen this offseason. His loss may be addition by subtraction as he was not the same player he was as little as two years ago. Adam Peters signed Javon Kinlaw and Eddie Goldman to go along with Daron Payne and Jer’Zhan Newton on the inside and added Deatrich Wise and Jacob Martin on the edges.

On the offensive line, a tsunami hit. Peters traded for All-Pro left tackle Laremy Tunsil, one of the best one-on-one pass protectors in the league. He will lock down left tackle (which was a big problem area last season) for the foreseeable future. Adding Tunsil means finding a new home for Brandon Coleman. He will get his shot at right tackle but could slide inside to guard and be a force there. Nate Herbig was added to provide help on the inside and should compete with Nick Allegretti at left guard. Andrew Wylie will return for a third season but could slide inside to right guard while Sam Cosmi recovers from ACL surgery. Trent Scott and Michael Deiter were re-signed to provide depth. The return of John Bates on a new three-year deal was equally as important, as Bates is one of the best blocking tight ends in the NFL.

These moves on the offensive line should take an average unit and make it a strength.


2025 Team Needs:


With all this improvement, one may ask what other areas need some attention as the NFL Draft approaches?

EDGE: Washington has some warm bodies, but none that really stand out as a true alpha on the edge.

Wide Receiver: The addition of Deebo Samuel will help take some pressure off Terry McLaurin and give Daniels another dynamic receiving threat, but both McLaurin and Samuel are on the last year of their current deals and will be turning 30 during the season. A young outside receiver to grow along side of Jayden Daniels is needed.

Corner Back: Between injury and inconsistent play, Marshon Lattimore struggled after the Commanders traded for the veteran. Mike Sainristil was moved to the outside, but his best position may be in the slot. Jonathan Jones offers a veteran presence and inside/outside versatility, but the soon-to-be 32-year-old is on a one-year deal in Washington. A young corner is needed for the future.

Running Back: Brian Robinson is about as average as they come in this league. He lacks vision, great receiving skills, and break-away ability. He’s also fumbled eight times in the last three years. A dynamic home run threat would be a welcome addition to the backfield.


Can a game-changing running back take Washington to another level?


Being able to run the football and stop the run are vital in the NFL. Just ask the current Super Bowl Champion Philadelphia Eagles. As previously mentioned, Washington did a lot this offseason on both sides of the trenches to help stop the run and potentially to increase the efficiency in the run game.

But one key piece is missing...

2024 Playoff teams and their running back output from their “bell-cows”

NFC:


Eagles: Saquon Barkley - 2,283 scrimmage yards, 15 total TD

Lions: Jahmyr Gibbs - 1,920 scrimmage yards, 20 total TD

Packers: Josh Jacobs - 1,671 scrimmage yards, 16 total TD

Vikings: Aaron Jones - 1,546 scrimmage yards, 7 total TD

Bucs: Bucky Irving - 1,514 scrimmage yards, 8 total TD

Rams: Kyren Williams - 1,481 scrimmage yards, 16 total TD

Commanders: Brian Robinson - 958 scrimmage yards, 8 total TD

AFC:

Ravens: Derrick Henry - 2,114 scrimmage yards, 18 total TD

Steelers: Najee Harris - 1,326 scrimmage yards, 6 total TD

Texans: Joe Mixon - 1,325 scrimmage yards, 12 total TD

Bills: James Cook - 1,262 scrimmage yards, 18 total TD

Chargers: J.K. Dobbins - 1,058 scrimmage yards, 6 total TD

Chiefs: Kareem Hunt - 904 scrimmage yards, 7 total TD *had RB-by-committee

Broncos: Javonte Williams - 859 scrimmage yards, 4 total TD *had RB-by-committee

What stands out to me on this list, is among all the 2024 playoff teams, Brian Robinson, who started 14 games for Washington, was the least-effective starter from a team’s lead back (minus the committee approach in Kansas City and Denver).


Case Study:


The Detroit Lions:

The 2022 Detroit Lions were coming off a 3-13-1 season the prior year and weren’t expected to make a lot of noise in the NFC. They had some good players, most notably quarterback Jared Goff, but were in a re-build mode. The 2022 draft saw them select EDGE Aidan Hutchinson and wide receiver Jameson Williams (via a trade with Minnesota) in round one. Hutchinson would go on to start all 17 games, while Williams played sparingly while still recovering from ACL surgery. Dan Campbell’s crew finished 9-8 and missed the playoffs.

The following season, the table was set for Detroit to make a run at the NFC North. They made some key free agent additions and had multiple first round picks yet again. This time they chose to trade back in round one (from pick 6 to pick 12) and drafted the dynamic running back Jahmyr Gibbs out of Alabama. As a rookie Gibbs produced 1,261 scrimmage yards and 11 touchdowns.

The Lions won the NFC North with a record of 12-5 and went on to win two playoff games before falling to the 49ers in the NFC Championship game.

Gibbs and the Lions had one of the most explosive offenses in the NFL in 2024. They were second in yards per game behind only the Ravens (who had the dynamic Lamar Jackson and Derek Henry) at 409.5 and were tied with the Chiefs for the best record in the league at 15-2. Gibbs was third in the NFL in yards from scrimmage with 1,929 and his 20 total touchdowns ranked first.

Despite losing to the Commanders in the divisional round of the playoffs, Dan Campbell’s squad is a force in the NFL and should remain that way for the next few years.


The need for a complete running back:


We all saw how the addition of Saquon Barkley propelled the Philadelphia Eagles to a Super Bowl Championship. Although the Eagles didn’t draft the dynamic back, he INSTANTLY made an impact on their football team. Barkley had 2,283 scrimmage yards and 15 total touchdowns during the regular season and added an additional 574 yards and five scores during the playoffs (four games played).

The San Francisco 49ers added a dynamic running back via the trade route when they acquired Christian McCaffrey from the Carolina Panthers during the 2022 season in exchange for the team’s second, third and fourth round picks in 2023 and fifth-round pick in 2024. The following season, the 49ers went to the Super Bowl and lost in overtime to the Chiefs. McCaffrey had 160 total yards from scrimmage and a touchdown.

The 2025 free agent running back group was very underwhelming. Washington has already made three recent trades (Lattimore, Tunsil and Samuel) that limited their draft resources to try and acquire a running back via trade. However, in a LOADED draft class at the position, the Commanders sit in a pretty good spot with their top two picks to land a future game-changer at the position if they so desire.


Some potential game-changing running back prospects in the 2025 draft:


Ashton Jeanty (will be gone before pick 29)

Omarion Hampton: UNC 6’0” 221 4.46 40 (RD1-2)

TreVeyon Henderson: Ohio St. 5’10” 202 4.43 40 (RD1-2)

Quinshon Judkins: Ohio St. 6’0” 221 4.48 40 (RD2)

Dylan Sampson: Tennessee 5’8” 200 4.48 40 (RD2-3)

D.J. Giddens: Kansas St. 6’0” 212 4.43 40 (RD2-3)

Bhayshul Tuten: Virginia Tech 5’11” 209 4.32 40 (RD3-4)

Jaydon Blue: Texas 5’9” 196 4.38 40 (RD3-4)



I have been against taking a running back in round one due to the great depth at the position in the draft, however I have developed a draft-crush on TreVeyon Henderson and would be EXTREMELY tempted to select him at pick number 29 if he was there. He is a homerun threat every time he touches the football, is excellent as a receiver out of the backfield and is the best pass protecting running back in this draft. The injuries earlier in his career at Ohio St. scare me a bit, as well as his ability to run consistently between the tackles. With his frame, I believe he could carry 215 pounds without losing any of his speed, and he has shown great ball security only fumbling once during his time in college.

I have a draft-crush on Henderson, but I always try to talk myself out of him in RD1 because of my philosophy on getting a RB later in the draft

However, I pulled the trigger at 29 (he has an ELITE skillset) then traded out of RD2 with the Pats getting their high 3rd and a 4th pic.twitter.com/mY3mQxqGA9

— Mark Tyler (Hogs Haven) (@Tiller56) April 13, 2025


With our franchise quarterback now in place, Washington will be a contender for years to come. Can a game-changing running back help take the Commanders to the next level as we’ve seen with some recent teams?

We may get a piece to that answer in a little less than two weeks!



Source: https://www.hogshaven.com/2025/4/13...-make-a-good-washington-commanders-team-great
 
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