Travis Hunter

Brent Schwartz’s 2025 NFL Mock Draft

We’re just over 10 days away from the 2025 NFL Draft. Every year I look forward to making a mock draft, but I only create one. It’s a fun way to dive deeper into each NFL team’s scheme, personnel and roster needs. I keep that in mind with each of my selections. Hopefully this will be a fun and informative read for anyone that has arrived here. This is a first-round only mock where I have zero trades. That’s unlikely to happen come next Thursday, but I still think these predicted fits are realistic and make sense.

I’ll save any more preamble. There’s no need to babble on just for SEO optimization. Enjoy!

Titans
              Cam Ward             
 1. CAM WARD
Miami · QB
With the Titans cancelling workouts with Shedeur Sanders and Travis Hunter, this now seems like a given. Ward has a quick release and demonstrates keen ability on off-platform throws and out-of-structure plays. In comparison to other classic, pocket-passing processors, Ward seems to embrace and relish the chaos. But compared to the mayhem Will Levis may bring on any given play, Ward’s knack for havoc will seem mild. He’s a creative playmaker with ample arm talent and appears to be the choice for the Titans to start anew at the position.

 

              Travis Hunter             
 2. TRAVIS HUNTER
Colorado · WR/CB
Although the signing of Joe Flacco and acquisition of Kenny Pickett shouldn’t deter the Browns from selecting a QB early in this draft, my hunch suggests they’ll go with who they view is the best player in this draft at pick No. 2.

Last year’s Heisman Trophy winner is truly a never-before-seen talent. Almost nothing said about his play and prospect hype as a two-way player are hyperbolic. Browns GM Andrew Berry made it a point to stand right behind Hunter to view his route-running during Colorado’s recent Pro Day. “We would see him as a receiver primarily first, but I think part of, again, what makes him a bit of a unicorn is the fact that he can do both at a high level,” Berry said of Hunter in February’s NFL Scouting Combine.

Hunter has exceptional ball skills, body control, quickness and explosiveness that lends himself well for play on both sides of the ball. He is an incredible athlete but his playmaking ability and nuance/subtleties are just as impressive. Whether he compliments Jerry Juedy at receiver or Denzel Ward at perimeter cornerback, the Browns will have a lot to work with.

 

Giants
              Abdul Carter             
 3. ABDUL CARTER
Penn St · EDGE
The consensus is there are two true blue-chip players in this class in Hunter and Abdul Carter. Despite signing both Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston as veteran options at QB, the Giants will be a team to monitor for Shedeur Sanders here, but Carter may be too enticing to pass up on.

Dexter Lawrence is a dominating presence in the interior for the Giants, but the heavy assets poured into Brian Burns (trade, contract extension) and Kayvon Thibodeaux (No. 5 overall pick in 2022) on the edges have not yielded desired results. Carter (6-3, 250 lbs) is an explosive defender in the mold of Micah Parsons as a Penn State off-ball LB who successfully transitioned to pass rusher. He was second in the FBS with 62 pressures last season, per SIS (Sports Info Solutions.) He fits nicely as a stand-up EDGE in Shane Bowen’s 3-4 under defensive scheme.

Carter’s presence may allow the Giants to move Thibodeaux inside on third downs, which would give Giants fans memories of their “NASCAR” pass rush package that brought them two Super Bowl wins in 2007 and 2011. Carter can also rush the passer from multiple spots, including standing up over the interior of the offensive line as a blitzing linebacker.

 

              Will Campbell             
 4. WILL CAMPBELL
LSU · OT
Giants defensive coordinator Shane Bowen coached the Titans defense under Mike Vrabel for six seasons (2018-2023) – three as an outside linebackers coach, then three as the team’s defensive coordinator. Look for the Patriots to run a similar defensive system under Vrabel and defensive coordinator Terrell Williams. This will be a multiple scheme with a mix of looks including a 3-4 under front that attacks. That would have made Abdul Carter a perfect fit here as a stand-up edge rusher in a 4-man (3-down) front. Georgia’ Jalon Walker should also garner some consideration for a team that ranked 32nd/dead last in sacks (28) last season.

But sub-33 inch arms or not (depends on which measurement you trust), the Patriots must find a way to improve their porous offensive line that finished 31st in pass block win rate (51%) and 32nd/dead last in run block win rate (67%), per ESPN Analytics. Despite his length, Campbell’s has size (6-6, 319 lbs) and the necessary athleticism to compete at left tackle. And worst scenario, the Patriots may get a top-level left guard, which is another question mark and position of need at the moment.

This isn’t a sexy pick, and it’s fair to contemplate disappointment considering the Patriots entered Week 18 with the No. 1 overall pick, but New England desperately needs help along the offensive line for Drake Maye.

 

team logo
              Mason Graham             
 5. MASON GRAHAM
Michigan · DL
Despite fielding Josh Hines-Allen and Travon Walker as edge rushers, the Jaguars were 32nd/dead last in pass rush win rate (27%) last season, according to ESPN Analytics, and 28th in sacks (34). Enter Mason Graham. Although he lacks the body build of a Top-5 pick, and is bit undersized (6-3, 296 lbs) in the interior, Graham is a menacing presence as both a pass rusher and run stuffer as a three-technique defensive tackle.

He spent 77% of his time lined up in the B-gap in Michigan’s 3-4-principled, Nickel 2-4-5 looks, per PFF, with some snaps lining up over the tackle in a base 3-4 defense. He also projects well as a one-gapping defensive tackle in a 4-3 scheme.

New Jaguars DC Anthony Campanile is coming over from the Green Bay Packers after a year under Jeff Hafley. He describes the defense he’s implementing as a “a 4-3 with some 3-4 spacing.

 

Raiders
              Will Johnson             
 6. WILL JOHNSON
Michigan · CB
This has been a spot where many have mocked Ashton Jeanty, so this may be a bit of a shock, but this fit does appear to be picking up steam.

With Michigan alum Tom Brady now part of the ownership group, Raiders head coach Pete Carroll gets the style and body type of boundary cornerback he likes here. Johnson (6-2, 194) has the length and ball skills to thrive in many different coverage schemes. Last year in Michigan under DC Wink Martindale, Johnson played 82% of snaps in zone coverage, per SIS.

For a former Seahawks coach who drafted and developed the likes of Richard Sherman and Tariq Woolen as lengthy boundary cornerbacks who excelled in both Cover-3/Cover-4 zone looks, Johnson will be a nice first pick for the Raiders under Carroll.

 

Jets
              Armand Membou             
 7. ARMAND MEMBOU
Missouri · OT
The Jets were 29th in run block win rate last season (68%), per ESPN Analytics, and they lost right tackle Morgan Moses in free agency. Membou is physical in the run game, and projects best in a zone-rushing scheme. He blocked for zone concepts on 85% of run snaps last year for Missouri, per SIS. A year after the Jets mostly started aging veterans Tyron Smith and Morgan Moses at the offensive tackle spots, they’ll now look to Membou and last year’s No. 11 overall pick, left tackle Olu Fashanu, in the Aaron Glenn era.

 

Panthers
              Jalon Walker             
 8. JALON WALKER
Georgia · EDGE/LB
The Panthers missed out on Milton Williams but they made several under-the-radar moves in free agency to help shore up last year’s poor performance in their defensive front seven. Carolina ranked dead last/32nd in run stop win rate (25%) and 31st in pass block win rate (28%) last season, per ESPN Analytics.

Carolina would welcome Walker as an explosive stand-up speed rusher opposite Jadeveon Clowney in DC Ejiro Evero’s attacking 3-4 defense. The Panthers also released long-time off-ball LB Shaq Thompson this offseason. Walker spent time at linebacker before moving to edge rusher while at Georgia. He can wreck havoc as a pass rusher from several spots. On the edge, he projects as a Top-10 pick version of another former Georgia Bulldog, Nolan Smith.

 

Saints
              Shedeur Sanders             
 9. SHEDEUR SANDERS 
Colorado · QB
The recent Derek Carr news and Deion Sanders subtle (not really) hints suggest the Saints could be a landing spot for Shedeur Sanders here.

I’d expect the Saints to be patient with new head coach Kellen Moore, who will be leading a full-on, reset-the-salary cap rebuild that won’t conjure any memories of the immediate success that the 2006 team had under Sean Payton’s first year.

Moore will have time to groom and develop Sanders, who is a tough, accurate pocket passer who is a better-than-you-think processor. Sanders often got himself into sack trouble by pressing to make a play behind Colorado’s offensive line.

 

Bears
              Ashton Jeanty             
 10. ASHTON JEANTY
Boise St · RB

Although they are vastly different styles of runners, Ben Johnson must be thinking of the Lions selection of Jahmyr Gibbs (No. 12 overall in 2023) here when it comes to any RB-draft value discourse. 

The Bears did a lot of work to bolster their offensive line before the draft, paving the way for Jeanty here. The Boise State running back has outstanding balance and ball carrier vision as highlights of an endless list of strengths. He thrives in both gap and zone runs and would be a perfect lead back for the diversity of run concepts Johnson will likely integrate into the Chicago offense. 

 

49ers
              Walter Nolen             
 11. WALTER NOLEN
Ole Miss · DL
Similar to Carolina, I would be pretty surprised if San Francisco’s first-round pick was not used to bolster their front seven.

Mykel Williams and Shemar Stewart each took Top-30 visits with the 49ers. Both prospects are physical marvels who would be an intriguing fit opposite Nick Bosa. But this is a primarily a four-down, wide-9 scheme in San Francisco, who has Robert Saleh returning as a second stint at defensive coordinator. Stewart and Williams played in 3-4 style defenses in the SEC in college, that often asked them to either play over/inside the tackle or as a stand-up edge rusher, something San Francisco rarely does.

I think they may view Walter Nolen (also had a Top-30 visit here), a former No. 1 overall high school recruit, as a fit as a penetrating three-technique who can create pressure inside. The 49ers know all too well how an important defensive piece that is from Chris Jones’ play for the Chiefs in their Super Bowl VLIII loss.

 

Cowboys
              Tetairoa McMillan             
 12. TETAIROA MCMILLAN
Arizona · WR
I thought about both Omarion Hampton and Shemar Stewart here for a Cowboys team who lacks a premier lead back and possibly needs a power-based EDGE replacement for Demarcus Lawrence.

McMillan is a 6-4, 219-pound receiver who moves fairly well after the catch and has good body control for his size. He uses his large catch radius to pluck balls out of the air and can be a factor both as an X-receiver on the outside and as a big slot option.

CeeDee Lamb actually spent 50% of his time in the slot last season for the Cowboys, according to PFF, so McMillan best projects as primarily a boundary option for Dak Prescott here.

 

Dolphins
              Kenneth Grant             
 13. KENNETH GRANT
Michigan · DL
The Dolphins desperately need help along the interior defensive line in their 3-4 scheme after Calias Campbell signed with Arizona. Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver is a former Ravens player and recent Baltimore defensive coach under John Harbaugh. The Baltimore Raven-Michigan Wolverine defensive ties run deep over the last decade between the Harbaugh brothers.

Coming from virtually the same 3-4/Nickel 2-4-5 scheme in Michigan that Weaver coached under in Baltimore, Grant is a perfect fit inside as a versatile defender with alignment versatility to play multiple spots. At 6-4, 331 pounds, Grant played both nose tackle and in the B-gap last season at Michigan. He has the ability to two-gap in the run game and also adds value as a pass rusher.

 

Colts
              Tyler Warren             
 14. TYLER WARREN
Penn St · TE
The Colts have a major need at tight end, and Tyler Warren has often been comped to Dallas Clark, which makes this fit both realistic and fun.

Warren (6-5, 256) has a rare toughness-athleticism combo at the position. He barrels over defenders in YAC opportunities and at times lined up as a Wildcat QB.

He is a true move piece who can play in-line as a ‘Y’, in the wing position as an H-back, or flexed out in the slot. He is both a pass catcher and playmaker in the passing game and is a factor as an in-line blocker in the run game.

 

Falcons
              Mike Green             
 15. MIKE GREEN
Marshall · EDGE
I prefer Mykel Williams as a 3-4 OLB, but the Falcons were 31st in the league in sacks (31) in 2024, and desperately need some juice here.

Green (6-3, 251 lbs) is an explosive, twitchy pass rusher who led the FBS in sacks (17) last season and generated 53 pressures, per SIS. He is also phenomenal against the run garnering a 90.2 run defense grade from PFF last season.

He spent 100% of his snaps last season in a 2-point stance as an edge rusher (via SIS, SumerSports) and projects as a stand-up EDGE in Raheem Morris’ 3-4 defensive scheme.

 

Cardinals
              Mykel Williams             
 16. MYKEL WILLIAMS
Georgia · EDGE
Former Eagles DC and current Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon gets a remade EDGE group in one offseason with the signing of former Eagle Josh Sweat and the selection of Georgia’s Mykel Williams here.

Williams is a massive/lengthy (6-5, 260, 34 3/8 arms) and athletic prospect who battled through an injury last year and spent a lot of time playing over or inside the tackle as a 4i/5 technique in Kirby Smart’s 3-4/Odd ‘Mint’ and ‘Tite’ fronts. Georgia sort of used him like they did 2022 No. 1 overall pick Travon Walker at times.

Williams spent 85% of his time lined up in a 3-point stance in pass rush situations last season, per SumerSports. He projects to play as a stand-up EDGE in Gannon’s 3-4/Nickel 2-4-5 scheme here, where he should be able to reach his potential as a pass rusher. He’s also phenomenal in run defense, so he can line up on the strong side in a 2-point stance over or outside the tight end. His presence should allow Josh Sweat (2.5 sacks in Super Bowl LIX) to rush more from the weak side.

 

Bengals
              Nick Emmanwori             
 17. NICK EMMANWORI
South Carolina · SAF
Assuming the Bengals are able to work things out with Trey Hendrickson, they nab Nick Emmanwori here as a strategic piece in the AFC arms race.

The conference currently goes through Kansas City, and scanning the landscape for other elite teams/offenses (Buffalo, Baltimore), you’ll find that that offenses led by Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson all operate heavily both underneath and in the middle of the field. Look around and you’ll see many of those teams top targets are tight ends (Travis Kelce, Mark Andrews, Isaiah Likely, Dalton Kincaid) or receivers (Khalil Shakir, Zay Flowers, Rashee Rice) that operate underneath and inside.

Emmanwori won’t be a true deep, centerfield replacement for Jessie Bates that they’ve needed, but he can play as an enforcer in the box, as a middle-field rover, or can operate in two-deep looks with the ability to man-up on athletic tight ends on third down. He also has a bonkers athletic profile at 6-3, 220 running a 4.38 40-yard dash with a 43-inch vertical jump.

 

Seahawks
              Kelvin Banks Jr.             
 18. KELVIN BANKS JR.
Texas · OL
They Seahawks know they must improve on the offensive line, particularly on the inside. Banks (6-5, 315) is viewed as a guard by some teams and I’m projecting him there here in Seattle.

Banks played well at tackle last year for Steve Sarkisian’s offense that features a lot of wide zone (SIS has Banks’ run-blocking reps as a 60-40 split toward zone concepts last season). That’ll serve well for new Seattle offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak.

 

Buccaneers
              Jihaad Campbell             
 19. JAHID CAMPBELL
Alabama · LB/EDGE
Lavonte David was re-signed to a one-year deal but he enters his age-35 season, and the Buccaneers need another off-ball linebacker for Todd Bowles 3-4 defense anyhow.

For a team that once got great play out of Devin White, Campbell offers explosiveness, athleticism and sidelinie-to-sideline ability with much more length (6-3, 235 lbs).

He’ll be an effective blizer, and can even play his fair share of snaps as a stand-up edge rusher. He was originally recruited to Alabama to play EDGE, per NFL Network‘s Daniel Jeremiah.

 

Broncos
              Omarion Hampton             
 20. OMARION HAMPTON
UNC · RB
I almost wanted to slot Luther Burden here because of Sean Payton’s ‘Joker‘ role comment during Super Bowl week, but the signing of Evan Engram should be able to help there, and Burden is looking like a Day 2 pick.

In Omarion Hampton the Broncos get a ready-made, 20+ carries-a-game back with size (6-0, 221 lbs), burst and  aggression as a north-south, no-nonsense runner. NFL Network‘s Lance Zierlein comps Hampton to Rhamondre Stevenson and calls him a “battering ram” in his scouting profile write-up.

 

Steelers
              Derrick Harmon             
 21. DERRICK HARMON
Oregon · DL
This could be a Jaxson Dart or Jalen Milroe landing spot while the Steelers wait to hear from Aaron Rodgers, but in this first-round mock draft with no trades, I push Dart, Milroe and Tyler Slough to the Round 2/Day 2 chaos.

Cameron Heyward was unbelievable in 2024 but he’ll be 36 years old entering this season. It’s been since the Steel Curtain years that Pittsburgh has played anything but a 3-4 scheme on defense. They’ll need a capable defensive lineman to take the baton. And it’s not very easy to find NFL-sized defenders capable of sliding into a 5-tech role with prior experience.

Harmon spent most of his time in the B-gap or over the tackle as a 4i/5-tech at Oregon last season in Dan Lanning’s Georgia-inspired 3-4/Mint front defense. It’s a very similar snap count alignment to how Heyward is utilized in Pittsburgh.

Harmon led all FBS defensive tackles in pressures (37) last season, according to SIS. He has the ability to penetrate and shoot gaps, even further inside as a 3-tech, in pass rush situations. He can also two-gap in the run game.

“He plays like a Raven or a Steeler. Off the tape, he reminds me of a young Cam Heyward but bigger,” an NFC executive said to NFL Network‘s Lance Zierlein. That’ll do.

 

Chargers
              Colston Loveland             
 22. COLSTON LOVELAND
Michigan · TE
The Chargers need help along the defensive line if they are to play how they’d like in their 3-4 scheme, but with Kenneth Grant off the board, there’s another Jim Harbaugh-coached Michigan man that was hard to pass up. Everyone who has Loveland getting by the Colts at pick No. 14 seems to have this mocked, and I can understand why.

Coleston Loveland gives Justin Herbert a safety blanket receiver on third down. He’ll be the offense’s No. 2 pass catcher behind Ladd McConkey as a tight end who can flex out in the slot, but also hold up in run blocking in-line or in the wing as an H-back.

Loveland has great hands and size (6-6, 248 lbs) and has the body control and route-running ability of a pro wide receiver.

 

Packers
              Jahdae Barron             
 23. JAHDAE BARRON
Texas · CB
With or without Jaire Alexander going forward, the Packers need to think about help on the boundary at cornerback. Jahdae Barron is a versatile defensive back who spent more time outside at Texas last season after initially manning the STAR role.

The Packers were a Cover-3 and Cover-2 heavy scheme last year, which fits Barron nicely whether he plays outside or in the slot. Barron played zone coverage on 80% of his pass defense snaps last season, per SIS. 

 

Vikings
              Shavon Revel Jr.             
 24. SHAVON REVEL JR. 
ECU · CB
The Vikings played much more zone coverage than man last season. In an ideal world, I believe Brian Flores would like to live in single-high safety looks playing Cover-1, Cover-3 and more Cover-0. To do that they’ll need better play at cornerback.

Shavon Revel Jr. is recovering from a torn ACL but should be ready for next season, and Minnesota likely got a good look at him during their reported Top-30 visit. The East Carolina product has a great story and background, and is the epitome of perseverance and mental toughness.

Revel has the desired size (6-2, 194 lbs), length and traits to thrive as a press-man or Cover-3/Cover-4 cornerback on the outside.

 

Texans
              Jihaad Campbell             
 25. JOSH SIMMONS
Ohio St · OT
The Texans signed Cam Robinson and Trent Brown to 1-year deals, but that shouldn’t stop them from thinking toward the future here.

Simmons may not be ready for this season after suffering a knee injury this past season, but many projected him as the top offensive tackle in this draft prior to the injury.

New Texans OC Nick Caley already added former Patriots fullback Jakob Johnson to the roster, suggesting he may impliment a diverse running game containing principles learned from both his time under Josh McDaniels (fullback/21 personnel, power concepts) and Sean McVay (zone concepts, duo, etc.).

Simmons blocked for a healthy mix of zone and gap runs at Ohio State, and he has the fluidity to mirror rushers in the passing game.

Like the man that brought both of them into the NFL in Josh McDaniels, Nick Caley and Texans GM Nick Caserio are former John Carrol University grads and Ohio natives. You can imagine that they are well-versed and plugged in with Ohio State and the defending champion Buckeyes. If not Simmons, Donovan Jackson or Emeka Egbuka work here, too.

 

Rams
              Emeka Egbuka             
 26. EMEKA EGBUKA
Ohio St · WR
I was as close as you could imagine to mocking Kentucky CB Maxwell Hairston here for a Rams team that needs help in the secondary and assumedly would like to continue building up their defense. But the fit for Emeka Egbuka here is too much to pass up.

The Rams loved to employ Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp in similar ways. Now Kupp is in Seattle and the Rams signed Davante Adams and re-signed Tutu Atwell. I think Adams projects as their X-receiver, and I’m not sure Sean McVay will ever use Atwell as more than a borderline WR3/WR4 in this lineup.

Egbuka is the perfect fit for Kupp as he has a similar build (6-1, 202 lbs) with polished route-running, adept feel for zone coverage and the toughness/willingness to block inside from condensed formations in the running game.

 

Ravens
              Donovan Ezeiruaku             
 27. DONOVAN EZEIRUAKU
Boston College · EDGE
Ravens GM Eric DeCosta hails from Taunton, Massachusetts, just 45 minutes from where Donovan Ezeiruaku played at Boston College. They may think James Pearce Jr. has more upside as a stand-up EDGE here, but I lean toward Ezeiruaku as both a better scheme and cultural fit for the Ravens.

Ezeiruaku led the FBS with 69 pressures last season (per SIS) and was second in sacks (15.5). He spent almost all of his snaps out wide as a stand-up EDGE in Boston College’s defense that runs a base Nickel 2-4-5 with similarities to the Ravens scheme.

 

Lions
              Shemar Stewart             
 28. SHEMAR STEWART
Texas A&M · EDGE
The Lions take advantage of a high-end potential prospect falling a bit further than some may anticipate here.

Stewart has an outstanding athletic profile at 6-5, 267 pounds with a 4.59 40-yard dash and 40-inch vertical jump. The Lions have been searching for pass rush help opposite Aidan Hutchinson and Stewart should thrive here as a power 4-3 defensive end in a three-point stance in Detroit after playing primarily as a stand-up edge rusher or over the tackle at Texas A&M.

 

Commanders
              Matthew Golden             
 29. MATTHEW GOLDEN
Texas · WR
This is another Maxwell Hairston landing spot, or even where a third running back such as Ohio State’s TreVeyon Henderson may sneak into Day 1, but Matthew Golden projects nicely here as an inside-outside weapon in Kliff Kingsbury’s offense.

Many opine he does not play to his 4.29 40-yard dash speed registered at the combine, but Golden presents as an upgrade at the Z-receiver spot here over Noah Brown and Luke McCaffrey, where he’d compliment Terry McLaurin (X), Deebo Samuel (F/move piece).

Kingsbury’s offense is traditionally a spread-you-out operation that features a heavy dose of RPOs, which is not dissimilar to the offense Golden played in under Steve Sarkisian at Texas or in the Air Raid operation he was at previously in Houston. Sarkisian was reportedly in the mix to be Kingsbury’s offensive coordinator with the Arizona Cardinals back in 2019.

 

Bills
              Maxwell Hairston             
 30. MAXWELL HAIRSTON
Kentucky · CB
There’s been a lot of analyst buzz here about Ole Miss cornerback Trey Amos, who took a Top-30 visit to Buffalo. But with Maxwell Hairston still available, it’s hard to ignore his potential.

Hairston is a fluid mover who ran a 4.28 40-yard dash at the NFL Scouting Combine. He played mostly zone coverage at Kentucky, and the Bills are predominantly a zone-heavy scheme. Even though Hairston could improve his physicality for the pro game, this is a solid addition opposite Christian Benford.

 

Chiefs
              Josh Conerly Jr.             
 31. JOSH CONERLY JR
Oregon · OL
Whether he challenges Jaylon Moore at left tackle, Kingsley Suamataia at left guard or Jawaan Taylor at right tackle, the Chiefs will develop and eventually find a spot for Josh Conerly Jr along the offensive line.

He is an athletic blocker who is farther along as a pass blocker than he is in the running game. But the Chiefs aren’t as bare in the road-grader department (see: Trey Smith). Their main goal this offseason is to improve in the trenches after what transpired in Super Bowl LIX. Conerly may work as both a future and immediate improvement at multiple positions up front.

 

Eagles
              Malaki Starks             
 32. MALAKI STARKS
Georgia · SAF
The Eagles could opt for offensive line help in the form of Donovan Jackson or Tyler Booker here, or they could take advantage of James Pearce’s availability, but their current depth chart after C.J. Gardner-Johnson’s release suggests safety is a major need.

The Georgia Bulldog-Philadelphia Eagle defensive pipeline continues here with Malaki Starks, who projects as an immediate starter in Vic Fangio’s two-high safety lineup.

“Sources at Georgia speak very highly of his character,” NFL Network‘s Daniel Jeremiah says. “His intelligence and leadership ability have blown NFL teams away in meetings.”

Starks spent 54% of his snaps in the slot or in the box last season for Georgia, per PFF, giving him the versatility to do a variety of things post-snap in Fangio’s spin-the-dial deployments.

Derrick Henry stiff arms Earl Thomas

NFL Monday Morning Madness: Titans, Chiefs to meet in AFC tilt of opposites + a NFC rivalry renewed

Many have said the NFL’s Divisional Playoff round is the best weekend in sports. I’m sure those people are not disappointed after this past weekend’s slate of games.

One major upset, one major comeback, and a close contest between two of the league’s top quarterbacks in legendary Lambeau Field.

But we begin with a side-by-side look at the AFC title game participants, and a barometer check of the conference as a whole.

*******

It almost happened. After an unfortunate turn of events, the Chiefs trailed the Texans 24-0 in the second quarter, with most believing that we were headed toward an unthinkable AFC “South” Championship Game — Tennessee at Houston.

Although intriguing and unexpected, it’s certainly not the game the NFL envisioned as a ratings bonanza for their second-most (tied) important game of their 100th season.

Luckily for those who may think that, Kansas City recovered. Patrick Mahomes reminded many of his brilliance in throwing for four second quarter touchdown passes, three to Travis Kelce, and Kansas City outscored Houston 51-7 the rest of the way, for a 51-31 victory.

“I don’t know who pissed him off, I don’t know who made him mad,” safety Tyrann Mathieu told Yahoo Sports of Mahomes, after the game. “I told him in the training room [afterwards], man — I said man, I don’t know who made you mad but I don’t have anything to do with it. Because when he comes out and [plays] like that, he’s clearly the best player in the National Football League by far, and everybody knows that.”

Mahomes vs Texans
Patrick Mahomes’ fiery attitude kept Kansas City’s playoff hopes alive, and broke Houston’s will and spirit. (Screenshot: NFL on CBS)

Make no mistake, this was Mahomes’s finest performance  — 23 for 35, 321 yards, five touchdowns  — which comes in the form of a 24-point comeback that is tied for fourth-best in NFL postseason history. After being down big, the phenom quarterback led seven straight touchdown-scoring drives, for 41 unanswered points.

Kelce played his role of Robin, or maybe a second Batman, in hauling in 10 catches for 134 yards and three scores.

“Coach Reid is dialing them up for me and Pat is putting the ball on the money every single time,” Kelce told CBS’ Tracy Wolfson after the game. It’s definitely a combination of everything coming together,

Reid is one of the best offensive minds in NFL history, but it took some off-script improvising by Mahomes and Kelce to come away with two key red zone scores during the comeback. Both times, Mahomes was flushed to the sideline, only to throw or pitch a touchdown to Kelce, who used spatial awareness to haul in scores around multiple defenders sitting near the end zone.

For fun, the Chiefs mercilessly added 118 yards on the ground and sacked Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson five times — three sacks by offseason acquisition Frank Clark.

It was a fast-paced, track sprint of a victory by Kansas City that showcased their speed and explosiveness on offense, and finished with help from their new-and-improved defense, led by newcomers Clark and Mathieu.

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Less than 20 hours earlier, the Titans had pulled off the unthinkable, a 28-12 smash-mouth beatdown over Lamar Jackson and the Ravens, whom were the league’s biggest regular season story.

Just like their win last week of Tom Brady and the Patriots in New England, postseason hero Derrick Henry was heavily utilized. The gargantuan back carried the ball another 30 times for 195 and a touchdown, and also threw for a goal line score on a jump-pass to Corey Davis. His Tim Tebow-style leap pass was just one of several rushing highlights that included a 66-yard, back-breaking scramble to set up his touchdown throw, and another long run along the sideline earlier in which he stiff-armed Earl Thomas to the point of turning him around, and into a lead-blocking fullback for his amusement. His performance was again, unstoppable.

The offense started after Kevin Byard intercepted a tipped Lamar Jackson ball off Mark Andrews fingertips, and Ryan Tannehill lobbed a long 3rd-and-goal touchdown pass to Jonnu Smith, who did most of the work in an acrobatic touchdown catch that set the tone.

“…Just starting the game out the way we did was a big key for us….It was huge,” Kevin Byard told The Athletic. “They’re probably one of the best first-quarter teams in the league, so the fact we got up on them in the first quarter, it kind of changed the game plan a little bit.”

Additionally, defensive coordinator and wizard Dean Pees stymied yet another former club on his revenge tour, with this being the best defensive performance of any team, all season. Soon-to-be-named MVP Lamar Jackson was elusive and unstoppable all regular season, and he produced 508 total yards of offense on Saturday, but that was mostly a hollow facade that did not tell the story of this game.

Tennessee held Baltimore’s offense to 12 points and forced three Jackson turnovers. The Titans muddled the middle of the field and loaded the box on Baltimore’s rushing attack, bringing up top-tier safety duo of Byard and Kenny Vaccaro near the line of scrimmage for a good portion of the game.

“We wanted to give him loaded boxes all night to get him out of the run game,” Titans cornerback Logan Ryan told Bleacher Report. “We were either playing with a loaded box and man to man and make him beat us throwing the ball outside mano-a-mano or we were going to play a zone defense, a quarters defense similar to what Buffalo did. And Buffalo played them well. Buffalo just didn’t score a lot of points on offense. So we had eight-, nine-man boxes all night. You play Madden and run Engage Eight all day, it’s hard to run the ball.”

Tennessee forced Jackson to throw 59 times, often leaving everything covered but the boundaries. Jackson struggled outside the numbers, showcased by a late interception by Vaccaro when the Ravens quarterback tried to hit Baltimore rookie Myles Boykin on a quick out toward the sideline when Baltimore was in near-desperation mode.

It doesn’t help that Baltimore lacks wide receiver talent outside of Hollywood Brown. Boykin and Willie Snead are not going to cut it. Baltimore had found success throwing to its three tight ends — Mark Andrews, Hayden Hurst, Nick Boyle — all season, but the Titans took them, and the middle of the field away.

As a team that was used to punching teams in the mouth early and often, John Harbaugh looked nervous and frustrated on the sideline, unsure if his style of offense could mount a double-digit postseason comeback. Despite Jackson keeping his cool (at least) attempting to get his team back in the game, Baltimore never recovered. On top of their struggles in the passing game — minus a few nice downfield throws by Jackson to Brown through the rare soft Titans zone coverage — Jackson was stymied on two 4th-and-1 quarterback sneaks after converting all eight such situations during the regular season.

For Baltimore, nothing seemed to work. They were left befuddled and disappointed, unable to capitalize on their best regular season in franchise history.

“Listen, Lamar Jackson’s the MVP,” Byard told The Athletic. “He deservingly is supposed to be the MVP, the will that he plays with, he’s an incredible athlete. He tried to do everything he possibly could to will his team back into it. But it was our day today.”

Tennessee quarterback Ryan Tannehill once again threw under 100 yards — 88 this week — but did throw for two touchdowns. Tennessee became the second team in postseason history to win back-to-back games in such fashion, joining the 1972 and 1973 Dolphins, and 1974 Steelers.

Behind Mike Vrabel’s fearless leadership, Tennessee came away with another old-school win. In a league where dual-threat quarterbacks and fast-break offenses equipped with speed and an NBA-style aggressivesnes are starting to take over, a defense and running game can still get it done. That shouldn’t seem so surprising, but yet, the win surprised many of us.

“If we’re being quite honest, we just shocked the world, and that’s all there is to it,” said Titans left guard Rodger Saffold.

“And the confidence and belief in this team is something I’ve felt before, and you guys already know that. This is a special team. We’re showing it. And you’ve got to love the underdog.”

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This weekend’s events left us with some questions about the changing-of-the-guard AFC that saw it’s dominating — for the past 20 years — team in the Patriots bow out early to a series of offseason questions, and it’s upstart, best-of-this-season team suffer perhaps the most shocking one-and-done loss in NFL playoff history.

What’s next for Baltimore? A soon-to-be optimistic look back on how they revolutionized football in 2019, perhaps. As Sports Illustrated’s Jenny Vrentas pointed out in a great piece, Jackson’s electrifying season did happen.

Baltimore will need to shore up their possibly overrated front seven and add a receiver or two to Jackson’s arsenal. There’s a good chance Lamar makes more strides in the passing game next season, similar to his Year 1-to-Year 2 jump.

Baltimore will likely regress some from their 14-2 mark, and they’ll have to deal with Pittsburgh. The Steelers have an elite defense and should see the return of Ben Roethlisberger next season, to help the offense.

And expect the Patriots to re-sign Tom Brady and supply him with a few offensive weapons for the dynasty’s home stretch. New England is not done yet.

Then there’s the two AFC finalists. After a season of blending in with a hobbled Patrick Mahomes, the Chiefs have won seven straight since beginning the year 6-4, with the defense being the story of their season in the second half. Mahomes and the offense sputtered for a bit, but they put on their best 2018 Chiefs impression in their win on Sunday.

Still, Kansas City must stay strong on defense, doing their best 2006 Colts impression, if they are going to go all the way.

But this season’s Titans have a heavy dose of 2007 and 2011 Giants to them. They are an underdog only to the outside world. After a 2-4 start to the season under Marcus Mariota, Tennessee is 9-3 under Tannehill, and Henry’s late-season run is reminiscent of the NFL’s older days, where superstar running backs could take over in January.

Despite allowing just 9.6 points per game since Week 11 prior to Sunday, the Chiefs have still been gashed for 4.9 yards per rush this season. Kansas City was without defensive tackle Chris Jones on Sunday, and even if Jones is good to go this Sunday, the Chiefs are left extremely vulnerable to another legendary Henry performance.

Dean Pees’ scheming versus Kansas City’s offense will loom large. As Baltimore’s linebackers coach & defensive coordinator from 2010-2017, Pees played his part in sometimes mitigating Rob Gronkowski, and sometimes Gronk and Aaron Hernandez, when limiting Brady and the Patriots.

In Tennessee, Pees has safeties Byard and Vaccaro playing like absolute madmen right now. There’s no way they’ll let Kelce beat them the way the Texans did.

They’ll force Mahomes to throw downfield to Tyreek Hill, Sammy Watkins and Mecole Hardman. And of course, Kansas City can win that way, but things will be tougher at least.

The Titans have tough and competent cornerbacks in Logan Ryan and Adoree Jackson, who can do their part, even against the unbelievable amount of speed that Kansas City possesses. But the Titans will need a steady and consistent pass rush on Mahomes to win. That’s the Titans’ key to the game, where as Kansas City must find some way to limit Henry or they will be in a world of trouble.

In theory, the Titans have all the tools necessary to beat Kansas City. This is a tough matchup for the Chiefs, but Kansas City’s offense is a tough matchup for anyone. Mahomes will score more than Brady and Jackson, and I’m not sure the Titans will be able to keep up if the game is forced into Tannehill’s hands.

My early prognostication is Kansas City winning a semi-close contest.

*******

In Green Bay, it was apparent from the first drive that Aaron Rodgers was going to be on. And Davante Adams — eight catches, 160 yards, two touchdowns —  picked up where Travis Kelce left off in the game before him, baffling both man and zone coverages from the opposing team.

Despite a late Russell Wilson push that stalled on a costly Malik Turner drop, it was apparent from the start that the Seahawks lacked the personnel and health to go on a realistic Super Bowl run.

Wilson did what he could, but this was Rodgers’ time. The Packers legend completed just 16 passes, but threw for 243 yards and two scores with zero turnovers. His beauty of a downfield, first-down pass to Adams on 3rd-and-8 was ice cold in the clutch, and put the Seahawks hopes on ice.

Seattle never got the ball back, Green Bay won 28-23 after getting out to a 28-10 lead. And the defense continued to be rewarded for Green Bay’s rare, high-profile free-agent purchases of Zadarius Smith and Preston Smith on the edge, as each picked up two sacks.

But next, they’ll face a San Francisco 49ers squad that is left as the best and most talented bunch. Heck, they’ve been the best NFC team all year. Their most impressive beatdown of the season came at Green Bay’s expense.

A 37-8 49ers win over the Packers in the Bay area back in November, in which Rodgers was held to a staggering 3.2 yards per pass attempt, and was sacked five times.

After a month or two of so-so defensive play since that day, San Francisco finally has their complete defensive front seven.

Dee Ford is back after missing the past two months, and linebacker Kwon Alexander was activated back off injured reserve after tearing a pectoral muscle a few months back.

Having the unit back together was apparent immediately on Saturday, as the 49ers dominated the Vikings, 27-10, by beating them in just about every facet of the game.

San Francisco held top-five running back Dalvin Cook to just 18 yards on nine carries, sacked Kirk Cousins six times and picked him off once while holding his yards per attempt to just 5.9.

Despite Green Bay fielding one of the best quarterbacks of all-time in Rodgers, it would be surprising to see them come out on top in San Francisco. The 49ers should see a better performance by Jimmy Garoppolo — 11 for 19, 131 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT — after he looked out of place trying to avoid Minnesota’s Eric Kendricks, the league’s top cover linebacker, who could have picked him off three or four times if he had pro pass-catcher’s hands.

San Francisco leaned on it’s running back committee on Saturday, rushing for 186 yards on 47 carries. Tevin Coleman — 22 carries, 105 yards, two touchdowns — was the lead man. He was brought in this offseason from Atlanta after breaking out with the Falcons under Kyle Shanahan’s watch, so Shanahan brought him to San Francisco.

If the 49ers run the ball this well versus Green Bay, the packers have little chance. Jaire Alexander and Kevin King may be able to slow down Emmanuel Sanders and rookie Deebo Samuel in the passing game, but an affective 49ers run game should set up Garoppolo-to-George Kittle after the duo struggled in this past game.

Despite Kelce’s superb performance, Kittle is the NFL’s best tight end. He is at least tied with Kelce as it’s best in pass-catching, and is certainly the best blocking tight end in football. He’s the complete package. He’ll most certainly make some plays next week.

Green Bay will have to have a repeat performance by Rodgers and Adams, while also leaning on running back Aaron Jones to get San Francisco’s best-in-the-league pass rush off Rodgers’ back.

San Francisco cornerback Richard Sherman has had a lot to say recently, but heck, he’s earned it, again. The 31-year-old had a pick on Saturday, and has reinvented himself as an older-but-smarter player with the 49ers.

Sherman covering Davante Adams will be the top player matchup of Conference Championship Sunday. If he can just slow down Adams (not even shut him out), things will be really tough on Green Bay. Jones, the running back, is likely their second-best pass catcher.

“The only place that I’m not the best corner in the game over the last generation is in the haters’ minds,” Sherman told The Athletic after the game. “You look at any stat, anything, and they just try to make it about other players. They never give me credit.”

“For all the people who think I’m in zone, it’s man,” Sherman said, continuing the lecture at his postgame presser. “I get tired of ‘oh man, he’s a zone corner.’ I get tired of hearing the excuses for why I’m great. It was man coverage. I covered the man. I picked the ball off. In the playoffs, in big games, I show up. Year in, year out. Whether it’s 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 — unless I tear my Achilles, I’m out there doing my job at a high level.”

There’s no doubt that the 49ers and Packers will play a closer game on Sunday than they did around Thanksgiving, but San Francisco is clear out-of-nowhere lead dog (although I’d like to toot my own horn in saying I had them winning the NFC West) that seems to pop up in the NFC almost every year. These uber-talented and fast teams seem to come up every so often.

Sherman was on the best of that category with the Legion-of-Boom era Seahawks. And now, he’s the vocal leader on Seattle’s rival, on the opposite end to the fascinating decade that was the 2010s.

There are plenty of smiles to go around in San Francisco, but they have one more game to win before a surprise trip to Super Bowl LIV. They should win it, in turn proving that a team with this amount of talent making it to the biggest game in their sport shouldn’t be all that surprising.