2 big 2025 NFL Draft questions as we hurtle toward the 1st round

14 Min Read

This is our last week before the NFL draft week, which means things that are about to fall and lock in place or become a twisted turn in chaos and anarchy. Let’s wait for the latter.

Honestly, any type of chaos related to the Draft may not come until next week, since some Jugd seek to pull one quickly with little plenty of time. Everything is about games games when it comes to this general process.

With questions all over the place and answers that can soon be found, here in The Skinny Post, Michael Peterson and RJ Ochoa, we are our best to enclose and not be obtained by anything.

HAPPY BRING YOU ATTRODUC WITH US.


What is your biggest question about the NFL 2025 draft?

Minnesota Vikings V Tennessee Titans

Photo of Wesley Hitt/Getty Images

RJ:

My answer is a little more expansive and has less to do with the draft, since life we ​​are close enough for things to begin to feel predictable. That said, I really wonder how this will go to the Tennessee Titans.

A year ago, we all had questions about Matt Eberflus, but we understood Caleb Williams and all the talent that the Chicago Bears were assembling possibly should work. That remains to be seen, but add Ben Johnson to the chief coach help. We don’t have to strengthen our eyes too much to see that Chicago arrives is my general point.

With respect to Tennessee … very well, so we know that Cam Ward will be his quartback. Does that do? Reaxly Make them contenders, only in a division down? The AFC South is committed to challenging the Houston Texans, but I really don’t think Ward and Brian Callahan are the correct answer when it comes to critical pillars. Much of that honestly has less to do with them and the lack of players around them … This franchise feels the son of losing in the sea.

Miguel:

My biggest question is also executed on a path similar to yours.

Since the Pittsburgh Steelers entered their era after Ben, they have remained a winning team in general, but that victory seems to stop quite fast when they do the postseason. It will reach nine years as his last victory in January, which was a victory over the Kansas City bosses in the 2016 division round.

They are leaving another winning season in 2024, where Justin Fields and Russell Wilson divided the beginnings of the season in Quarterback. However, Neinder Player is still on the list of steelers and, as things are, Mason Rudolph is currently its holder.

How long until the Steelers finally do something for their stable field marshal position? It really seems that this is the only area that prevented them from returning to the prominence that enjoyed the duration of Big Ben. No more bridge field marshal. No more depend on a strong defense to take most of the load for more than 17 games. Will Steelers finally make a movement to write a field marshal of the future?

Shedeur Sanders of Colorado visited the Steelers in recent days, but it is difficult to see him slide to the 21st team. Maybe the steelers make a movement up if it slides at all. Maybe they feel good with a Jaxson Dart or Jalen Milroe. Aaron Rodgers cannot be the answer, in my opinion, because he is only kicking the can later. If Rodgers succeeds in Pittsburgh, then once he is not in a position to get one of the best quartbacks in the draft next year.

Something has to give sooner rather than later.


What is the best position to take dart releases in the last day of the draft?

NFL: Detroit Lions in San Francisco 49ers

Sergio Estrada-Imagn images

Miguel:

Most of the time a team is collecting on the 3rd of the Draft, they do everything possible to balance the advantage with a need that wax enough to guarantee a selection in the first three rounds. And when it comes to equipment with an excess of late round selections, as teams that excessively used the compensatory selection formula, they almost have so many selections that could choose only each position they want.

In general, those are teams like the Ravens, Eagles, etc.: You know, the good ones. Usually, they are leaving a fairly good season and they are not a whip for any position too much. Then, when they have more than six to seven selections in the last three rounds, the boys can take shots without feeling a lot of pressure to hit them, if they do.

If it were a general manager, what positions do you think would prioritize in those later rounds with a journey of selections? Would you try to find those gems runners of the late round since #no matter or try to find shooting diamonds in premium positions such as offensive Tackle, corner and edge corridor? And devils, if they are the 49ers, you can find a franchise field marshal.

I think I would go with the last approach. Being able to find headlines and impact the players late in the draft separates the good teams from the greats. Having more good headlines in rookie contracts is a great advantage. If I had to name one, I would honestly go with corners. As the type of resident chargers around here, I am excited that the chargers considered that two current/future initial corners with a couple of fifth round teams last year Halleb Still and Cam Hart. The other initial security with Derwin James, Alohi Gilman, was a sixth round. The flexibility that these places have given to the chargers can be seen in this year’s approach, since they currently do not want anything too bad in the first rounds, which means taking the BPA approach to the funny other teams.

RJ:

My answer is very chalk, but I would be absolutely with quarters.

To bring things beyond … while I recognize that there is a lot in the exploration process, if I was in charge, I would be throwing darts to the quartbacks who played university football in a big way.

Continuing with the theme of the chargers, an example of this was they recruiting Max Duggan out of TCU a few years ago. It did not work, what is unfortunate, but throwing a dart to a field marshal who helped take a team to a national championship (even if they smoked) is the right son of Dart, in my opinion.


What is the greatest individual achievement in football?

NFL: August 7 Hof 2020 enhrinement class

Photo of MSA/Icon Sportswire through Getty Images

RJ:

We are leaving teachers, which is always a great pleasure for me personally. In staff There is no doubt that winning it is the greatest achievement that an individual can reach in the sport of golf.

Leaving aside the goals and objectives related to the team … I think that the greatest individual achievement that an NFL player can achieve is a place in the professional hall of professional football. He is always unfortunate when a player enters without success in the playoffs or without a Super Bowl in his name, but as they pointed out that they are things of the team.

Think of some players recently who have resorted to bronze busts in Canton as Calvin Johnson and Joe Thomas. Without a doubt, they were players of all time and thanked that the HAF exists to celebrate that since they were in teams that could not capitalize their talents.

Miguel:

Normally because to see something from your zig, but this is simply a position too good for not agreeing. In team games, there is always the possibility that a very, very good player is stuck in a collectively bad team and no matter how much elite level they play consistently, could have little or no FECT in the percentage of gain of general results. Joe Thomas, whom you observed previously, is an excellent example of that duration of his career with the Cleveland Browns.

The professional football hall helps people who give the Lombardi trophy a little recognition that people see the work they have done in years and years, even if a season never builds a trophy.

Imagine someone like Khalil Mack-A Guy who was named All-Pro in two different positions, which has not yet won a playoff game. There is the possibility that you never do it despite being one of the best to do so. I could not get anywhere near a Super Bowl, but at least the Hall of Fame is there to remember that it belongs between the elite elite.


What is the NFL version of Rory Mcilroy winning its first master’s championship?

Miguel:

Sunday was amazing. It was incredible dramatic and Mcilroy won it so properly that it made the whole event one of the most great things in which I am in the history of recent sport. I do not see the golf religiously in any way, but I love to see the great events that seem to unite the entire country. Masters is one of those events.

I think this is a really difficult question. The results of the Games in the NFL can still mean a lot for fans and players without having to be a Super Bowl. But when the Super Bowl is in a crash course with an emotionally exciting background story, well, you have a winner.

I go with Drew Brees and the Saints winning the Super Bowl on Peyton Manning and the Colts in the Super Bowl XLIV. It was just a handful of years after the events of Hurricane Katrina and I, we all know what that is for that community. Why do they join for the team of their hometown and see them win about one of the best quartbacks of that generation? That is movie script material.

RJ:

If we are staying with things that have happened, this is a good answer. Honestly, I think a better thought is to win by winning his first Super Bowl, which he won with the Indianapolis Tolts. As a devout golf fan, Rory’s big problem was that this particular thing had eluded him for so long. That was true with Peyton and a title in the sausage form.

If we change the discussion to be hypothetical things, forgive me here for saying that Roof Prescott won the Super Bowl for the Dallas Cowboys. Rory has always been the provarbial prince and promised himself and Rouf has had to carry a similar load while playing for the most visible team in professional sports. Doing it as Rory would deliver the ring to Mordor with respect to his own sport.

Share This Article