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Ten Piece Nuggets-NFL
The cartoon character Wimpy would often offer to pay Popeye on Tuesday for a hamburger today. Well, it’s Tuesday, time for Wimpy to pay up. And, if it’s Tuesday, it’s time for us to cook up our Ten Piece Nuggets. Except ours are free of charge and served below.
- The New Orleans Saints said welcome back to the NFL to their prized WR Michael Thomas after a week one holdout late last week. Thomas rejoined the team and joined the 100 million dollar club. The contract is for five years and guarantees 61 million. It’s the highest dollar contract for a WR ever. Not bad money if you can get it. He enters his fourth year after entering the league as a second round pick.
- Which WR’s went ahead of him in the 2016 draft? In round one it was 15. Corey Coleman, 21. Will Fuller, 22. Josh Doctson, and 23. Laquan Treadwell. In round two at 40th overall Sterling Shepard was taken. If you can even name which teams these five play on you play too much fantasy football. Thomas was taken 47th overall. In three years he has caught 321 passes, good for 3787 yards, and 23 TD’s. Shepard, also a second rounder, has caught 190 balls which is good by far for second place in this underwhelming group.
- Atlanta wants to keep up with the Joneses though. Soon, very soon, they will make Julio Jones the highest paid receiver in the NFL. And, they should. The now 30 year old is two catches shy of 700 and has over 10k yards receiving. If Atlanta won more often, or if he played for a higher profile team he would be even more well respected for his abilities. He is but a few strong seasons away from Hall of Fame type numbers.
- Drew Brees was on The Dan Patrick Show late last week. He finished second on the NFL Network countdown of the 100 best players. It’s the players who vote for these players making it one of the best lists of “best of” in BBR’s opinion. Patrick asked Brees his opinion of who should be number one. Without hesitation, Brees agreed with the voting that placed Aaron Donald, DT Rams, as the very best. Brees said, in effect, that Donald was special, and really in a league of his own. Patrick then asked who he thought should be second. Without hesitation again he said, “Tom Brady.” “Why?” asked Patrick. “Six Super Bowl wins,” Brees responded. “A quarterback is ultimately judged on wins,” he concluded.
- Speaking of winning, most every NFL year multiple teams (usually 3 or more) that went 6-10 or worse the year prior go 10-6 or better the next year and make the playoffs. It’s the parity the NFL covets. Easier schedules, health, luck, and higher draft picks help. It’s just rather hard to predict who.
- So, who went 6-10 or worse last year? The Giants, 49ers, Cardinals, Bucs, Lions, and Packers did so in the NFC. In the AFC it was the Bills, Jets, Broncos, Raiders, Bengals and Jaguars with the dubious distinction.
- The obvious choice from the above is the Green Bay Packers. Reasons to like them are 1) a healthy Aaron Rodgers, 2) an easier schedule that last year, 3) a bevy of high draft choices, 4) a more aggressive D, and 5) the enthusiasm and culture change a new head coach brings.
- Guessing who else is just that, guessing. BBR likes the San Francisco 49ers as a possibility.. The 49ers D isn’t bad. We are putting a lot of faith in the Jimmy Garropolo that went 5-0 in his first five starts at the end of 2017. And Nick Bosa is a beast coming off of the edge.
- Who else? Here is a long shot to do so Da Raidas. The Raiders bottomed out purposely last year. They stocked up on some high character hard nose draft picks and are in the midst of changing their culture with Gruden and Mayock running the show that moves to Vegas in 15 months. They might be more of a 2020 pick in year one in Sin City.
- Watching the Cleveland Browns will be fascinating this year. They haven’t had this much hype and hope in the Dawg Pound since the team was reborn in Cleveland after it’s prior one bolted to Baltimore. Mayfield, Landry, OBJ, and a salty D from a year ago might just be the ticket to playoffs. The division isn’t bad either. Cincinnati is weak. Baltimore is down. Pittsburgh is Pittsburgh, but beatable. Could the Browns win two v the Bengals and split home and away with the Ravens and Steelers? Sure. That’s 4-2. If you split the other ten 5-5, you finish 9-7. The Jets, Broncos, 49ers, Dolphins, and Cardinals are opponents that could be five victories. Ten wins aren’t out of the question. Or, will they find a way to be the same old Browns?
Wimpy never ate so well.