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Shreveport Times: TCU's Washington a good bet for N.O.

TopFrog

Lifelong Frog
http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/201...1031/SPORTS0301

[SIZE=14pt]TCU's Washington a good bet for N.O. [/SIZE]

By Glenn Guilbeau • [email protected]

You may have to stay up past 10 p.m. to see it, but the defending Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints could make Texas Christian University linebacker Daryl Washington their first pick in the newfangled NFL Draft with the 32nd and last pick of the first round Thursday night.

The new draft, which used to be held on a Saturday and Sunday in April, will be stretched out over two nights and one day and televised in prime time for the first time in league history. It all starts at 6:30 p.m. Thursday on ESPN and the NFL Network with the first round only that is scheduled to run until 10 p.m. Pre-draft coverage begins at 2 p.m. Thursday on ESPN and 10 a.m. on NFL Network.The second and third rounds will be televised live on ESPN and NFL Network beginning at 5 p.m. Friday and running through 9:30 p.m. The fourth through seventh rounds on ESPN and NFL Network will run from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Saturday.

"Looking forward to the new draft format," said Saints general manager Mickey Loomis, who has coordinated the good and bad of the last eight Saints' drafts, Thursday at a news conference at the club's facility in Metairie.

"I think it will be interesting. It will be interesting for me. It will be interesting for you guys to see how the process is impacted by this new schedule," Loomis said. "I think we have a few ideas of what could happen, but until we live through it once, we don't know."

ESPN analyst and former Tampa Bay Super Bowl winning coach Jon Gruden likes the idea of one night reserved for the critical and expensive first round instead of the first and second rounds on the Saturday and the last five on the Sunday as in the past.

"The way it was, it felt like three weeks at the end of the day," he said. "With what's at stake, it's good to take a break after the first round and reconvene in the morning after they've had a chance to think things over. I don't think it will be dramatically different until the first round is over. You might see more trades to start the second round. I think you'll see a little more aggressiveness."

The Saints may spend most of the first two days waiting as they will likely not pick until nearly 10 p.m. on Thursday and well into the night on Friday with the 64th pick of the second round and the 95th pick of the third round. They have fourth, sixth and seventh round picks (130th, 201st and 239th) on Saturday. They traded their fifth-round pick last year to Philadelphia to go up in the fifth round and nabbed punter Thomas Morstead.

Loomis feels far less pressure picking so low with regard to having to get a can't-miss player and the subsequent cost of the contract. He foresees some idle time on Thursday and Friday for he and his staff."There's a lot more time to sit around and eat," he said. "That's probably a negative, at least for me."

Loomis has not come out and said directly that the Saints will pick an outside linebacker with their first pick, but he virtually eliminated an offensive pick along with defensive backs and defensive linemen during the course of his news conference. And so far the most significant loss from the Super Bowl champions' roster is veteran strong side linebacker Scott Fujita, who signed a free-agent deal with Cleveland recently.

TCU's Washington (6-foot-3, 234 pounds) played in a 4-2-5 alignment in college and could fit in Fujita's old spot. Todd McShay, ESPN Scouts' director of college scouting, said on a teleconference last week that Washington could end up as a Saint.

"It wouldn't surprise me," he said. "I think Washington, depending on how things shake out, could be a really good pick at 32. I think if you could stack him up against a lot of these bigger name players from bigger schools, I think Washington's going to wind up becoming a better pro than a lot of them."

One of the linebackers McShay was referencing was Missouri's Sean Weatherspoon (6-1, 239), who some draft experts say will be available when the Saints select in the first round. Weatherspoon is more suited for the weak side, though.

"You'll hear Sean Weatherspoon a lot," McShay said. "I'm not as high on Weatherspoon as some other people are. I have a second-round grade on him. To me, Daryl Washington is just as good of a football player, if not better. The athleticism that he has, his ability and just his potential — he's just scratching that peak and the surface of what could be a tremendous football career ahead of him. He's instinctive. He's tough and continues that all through his frame, and he runs in the low 4.6's."

The Saints appear sound on the defensive line with the recent free-agent acquisition of Alex Brown from Chicago at end, and Anthony Hargrove recently re-signed with the Saints to end his free agency. They join returning veteran ends Will Smith and Bobby McCray and tackles Sedrick Ellis and recently re-signed Remi Ayodele.

"Alex Brown is a nice addition for us and helps us with our depth on the defensive line," Loomis said. "We have Anthony Hargrove back. He signed his contract, and that's comforting in the sense that he can play defensive end as well as defensive tackle."Generally, what you try to accomplish in an offseason is to fill enough of your major holes (via free agency) so that when you get to the draft, you're able to take the best available player. And so that's always the goal. We've been able to achieve that most years. You need to pay attention to the holes on your team, and if you do have a particular need at a position, what you hope for is that the best available player is at that position or at least graded very closely to it."

The Saints are among the strongest in the league at cornerback with Jabari Greer and Super Bowl interception hero Tracy Porter along with backups Randall Gay and Malcolm Jenkins. The Saints could be in the market for a safety as 34-year-old, five-time All-Pro Darren Sharper may jump to another team for a lucrative, multi-year deal.

Former LSU safety Chad Jones will likely still be around in the late second round for the Saints.

"He's an intriguing player," NFL draft expert Mike Detillier said Saturday. "I could see the Saints going for Chad. I know Mickey was at Chad's individual workouts at LSU's Pro Day. He's a great hitter and has shown some good speed in the 4.5-4.6 range for a safety."

Loomis also worked out outside linebacker Perry Riley and defensive tackle Al Woods at the Saints facility. Both are projected to be middle-to-late round picks.

"We always pay close attention to the LSU guys," Loomis said. "It's good business, number one. We don't want to miss on a guy in our own backyard, which occurred with Randall Gay."

Gay, a Saints free-agent signing in 2008 from New England, went undrafted in 2004 and signed with New England as a free agent.

"We don't want to miss a good guy from LSU," Loomis said.

LSU could have as many as 10 players picked, and the school record is only eight. Wide receiver Brandon LaFell and Jones could go as early as the second round but may fall to the third round, Detillier said. Other LSU players expected to go in the middle-to-late rounds are tailback Charles Scott, offensive guard Ciron Black, returner/receiver Trindon Holliday, Woods, Riley, defensive end Rahim Alem, safety/linebacker Harry Coleman and cornerback Chris Hawkins. Three other players have an outside chance of getting picked very late — tight end Richard Dickson, defensive tackle Charles Alexander and middle linebacker Jacob Cutrera.
 

2314@work

Contributor
QUOTE(Gunner @ Apr 18 2010, 10:52 AM) [snapback]546310[/snapback]
Wash and Hughes both go 1st round. And we will broadcast that far and wide.. :biggrin:

And both will be gone before NO picks.
I can't wait to see the Saints fall on their faces this year. Hell, they couldn't even beat the Cowboys last year.
I love Super Bowl hangovers :laugh:
 

50FT FROG

Active Member
QUOTE(2314 @ Apr 18 2010, 03:56 PM) [snapback]546311[/snapback]
And both will be gone before NO picks.
I can't wait to see the Saints fall on their faces this year. Hell, they couldn't even beat the Cowboys last year.
I love Super Bowl hangovers :laugh:

super bowl champs.

BELIEVE DAT!!!!!!!

btw, don't be shocked when one of them is available for the saints at 32.
 

2314@work

Contributor
QUOTE(Houston Frog @ Apr 18 2010, 01:51 PM) [snapback]546378[/snapback]
Cowboys


Cowboys%20Trophies.jpg
 

OmniscienceFrog

Full Member
QUOTE(Houston Frog @ Apr 18 2010, 01:51 PM) [snapback]546378[/snapback]
Cowboys are on year 15 of theirs


At least they've had several opportunities to have those kind of hangovers.
 

YCBJ Frog

New Member
QUOTE(2314 @ Apr 18 2010, 09:56 AM) [snapback]546311[/snapback]
And both will be gone before NO picks.
I can't wait to see the Saints fall on their faces this year. Hell, they couldn't even beat the Cowboys last year.
I love Super Bowl hangovers :laugh:



*flips bird*


They could fall on their face, and nobody here would really care for a few years. We have our Lombardi and will revel in that for the next few years, unlike Cowboys fans who enjoy constant misery by expecting to win every year (and failing to do so for a decade and a half).
 

YCBJ Frog

New Member
QUOTE(2314 @ Apr 18 2010, 03:06 PM) [snapback]546406[/snapback]
Cowboys%20Trophies.jpg




And how many of those have they won since salaries were capped, thus preventing large market teams from having a huge competitive advantage as they did in their runs?

It's not so easy when there's a level playing field.
 

Young and Horned

Active Member
Love how much Cowboys fans live in the past. Yay, you have five with none being in the last 15 years. And one playoff victory since?

Going to be hard for them to fall on their faces with the offense returning. Defense is losing a couple of players, but that can be addressed through the draft and FA.

I hate the Cowboys simply for their fans. Like the Saints, but frown upon their fans because most of them were Cowboys fans in the 90s and halfway into the 2000s.

I always stay true to the Green and Gold. And have some respect for Boys fans because they usually do the same.
 

Young and Horned

Active Member
But on a TCU note, this could be one of the biggest drafts for us in our history. If we get 2 first rounds picks, with one or two more later in the draft, that is HUGE. Tie in last year's draft with 5 players chosen and next year's draft with likely 5 or more taken with a few of those being top rounds, this is very huge for the program. We are now proving our defense can not only dominate in college, but those players can be drafted into the NFL. I know we have had people drafted before, but only a few were quality players. Now we are having more and more people being projected as quality players in the NFL. The times are good!
 

YCBJ Frog

New Member
QUOTE(Young and Horned @ Apr 19 2010, 10:04 PM) [snapback]547140[/snapback]
I hate the Cowboys simply for their fans. Like the Saints, but frown upon their fans because most of them were Cowboys fans in the 90s and halfway into the 2000s.



Are the only Saints fans you know from Shreveport? They tend to bandwagon with whichever is doing better, but almost everyone from Lake Charles to Monroe and everyone Southeast of the line between those two cities hates the Cowboys.

Feel free to like us loyal Saints fans. My grandfather once bought a rental house near Tulane stadium in the late 60's and rented it to college students with the stipulation that he be able to park there for Saints games on Sundays, and I thank God that he lived long enough to see them win a Lombardi after over 40 years (he's probably only got a couple of months left at this point).
 

Young and Horned

Active Member
QUOTE(you_can @ Apr 19 2010, 11:15 PM) [snapback]547144[/snapback]
Are the only Saints fans you know from Shreveport? They tend to bandwagon with whichever is doing better, but almost everyone from Lake Charles to Monroe and everyone Southeast of the line between those two cities hates the Cowboys.

Feel free to like us loyal Saints fans. My grandfather once bought a rental house near Tulane stadium in the late 60's and rented it to college students with the stipulation that he be able to park there for Saints games on Sundays, and I thank God that he lived long enough to see them win a Lombardi after over 40 years (he's probably only got a couple of months left at this point).


Meant it to be that I like the Saints. Not Hate Cowboys like the Saints. I grew up in Monroe and that was a Cowboys or other town in the 90s. Have a few friends who always stuck with the Saints though and I admire and like that.

I admire that about Cowboys fans, but they think their team is the best team and should win every Super Bowl, even when they struggle to win a playoff game. And if they do not win the SB, simply because their team isn't SB caliber, then they find other excuses to blame.
 

YCBJ Frog

New Member
QUOTE(Young and Horned @ Apr 19 2010, 10:27 PM) [snapback]547150[/snapback]
I admire that about Cowboys fans, but they think their team is the best team and should win every Super Bowl, even when they struggle to win a playoff game. And if they do not win the SB, simply because their team isn't SB caliber, then they find other excuses to blame.



What about all those North Louisianians that jumped ship to the Saints progressively since 2007? They are far closer to Dallas than they are here, and seemed fine being Cowboys fans when they were winning...

Bottom line is there are bandwagoners everywhere. The Cowboys have more overall fans than nearly any other NFL team, but I would bet their breakdown of bandwagoners to diehards is similar to what you see across other NFL teams during a good season (we'll have to examine that once they have a good season in the post-salary-cap era).
 

talor

Active Member
QUOTE(Young and Horned @ Apr 19 2010, 11:04 PM) [snapback]547140[/snapback]
I always stay true to the Green and Gold.


You are a Baylor fan? That sucks!
 

Young and Horned

Active Member
QUOTE(TCUTalor @ Apr 20 2010, 09:04 AM) [snapback]547253[/snapback]
You are a Baylor fan? That sucks!


No, I am not. Would have ended my life 2 months into cheering for them if that was the case.
 

talor

Active Member
QUOTE(Young and Horned @ Apr 20 2010, 10:09 AM) [snapback]547300[/snapback]
No, I am not. Would have ended my life 2 months into cheering for them if that was the case.


I was implying that your knowledge of the Packers color scheme is a bit off. Cheese is yellow, not gold. Same for GB uniforms.
 

Delmonico

Semi-Omnipotent Being
QUOTE(TCUTalor @ Apr 20 2010, 10:43 AM) [snapback]547331[/snapback]
I was implying that your knowledge of the Packers color scheme is a bit off. Cheese is yellow, not gold. Same for GB uniforms.



Officially, those GB uniforms are Puke Yellow and Moldy Green.......
 

Young and Horned

Active Member
Well, depends what you reference for gold. Growing up in Louisiana, I reference LSU for gold, and Packers yellow resembles that LSU gold to me. So I have always said Green and Gold. Yes, they are Green and Yellow, but i like Green and Gold better.
 

SnoSki

Full Member
QUOTE(you_can @ Apr 20 2010, 04:02 AM) [snapback]547139[/snapback]
And how many of those have they won since salaries were capped, thus preventing large market teams from having a huge competitive advantage as they did in their runs?

It's not so easy when there's a level playing field.



Sure wish they'd cap baseball. Basketball and the NFL are way more fun with it. It sucks watching the Yankees, Sox, Twins and Angels each year in the AL..
 
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