Monday, May 28, 2012

Colt McCoy is a long shot to be starting QB for the Cleveland Browns

Michael W. Youngman--Lead Analyst C.B.R.

As OTA’s continue through the summer on their way to the preseason, there is once again a quarterback controversy growing in Berea. Everyone has weighed in including Tom Heckert, Mike Holmgren, and of course Pat Shurmur. The consensus from the trio is that this is a fair competition between incumbent starter Colt McCoy and 1st round draft selection Brandon Weeden. And just to be “extra” fair they have also pointed out that career backup Seneca Wallace is also in the race.image
But in reality we all know that (short of him setting himself on fire), Weeden will be the Cleveland Browns starter at the outset of the 2012 season. The evidence has been clear from the start. The Browns have pursued many avenues during this offseason in regards to replacing McCoy. They attempted to trade with the Rams in order to go after Robert Griffin III, Discussed possibly trading for Sam Bradford, and finally the selection of Weeden in the 1st round. And just in case that’s not enough evidence to convince you of a lack of faith in McCoy, they also played with the idea of trading him during the draft. All of it adds up to this “open Competition” for the starting QB role being nothing more than an exercise in futility for McCoy.  So for those of you hoping to see #12 under center at the start of the season, here are four things more likely to happen the Colt McCoy being named the Cleveland Browns starting QB.


Chances of being killed by a vending machine 112 million to 1
Believe it or not there is an average of two deaths a year in the United States occurring as a result of being crushed by a vending machine. How exactly this occurs I can’t even begin to speculate, but in the future you should probably rethink snacking at the office.


Left-handed people dying because they are left handed 4.4 million to 1
How does a left-handed person die because their left handed? As it turns out approximately 2,500 southpaws die each year as a result of misuse of right-hand bias products such as power saws. And if that’s not bad enough a left-handed person lives on average 14 years less than right-handed people. I have heard that the Jets Mark Sanchez recently purchased a power saw for Tim Tebow. I’m sure Marks fingers are crossed.


Being struck by lightning 576,000 to 1
Obviously if the odds are 576,000 to one of being struck by lightning, the chances of it ever happening are remote, right? Don’t tell that to Roy Sullivan who was a former park ranger in Shenandoah National Park in Virginia. Between 1942 -1977 poor Roy was hit by lightning seven times and is recognized as the record holder in the “Guinness Book of World Records”. As an ironic side note, Roy’s middle name was Cleveland. If I’m lying may God strike me……………never mind.


Being on a flight with a drunk pilot 117 to 1
According to the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) statistics over the past decade, an average 12 pilots a year test positive for a blood alcohol level of over 0.04 percent. This average is out of a sample size of around 10,000 random tests a year. So does this mean that air turbulence is a real phenomenon, or just your pilot steering around a pink elephant?


At the end of the day Brandon Weeden will be given the opportunity over the incumbent starting quarterback Colt McCoy. Regardless of what any of the team’s coaches or personnel says, the Browns have chosen a different direction and that direction is Brandon Weeden.

http://www.clevelandbrownsreport.info/2012/05/colt-mccoy-is-long-shot-to-be-starting.html

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Good backup quarterbacks are valuable, and Colt McCoy could be that for Cleveland Browns: Terry Pluto

By Terry Pluto, The Plain Dealer

CLEVELAND, Ohio — A large number of media people and fans keep insisting the Browns have to cut or trade Colt McCoy.

Why? image

Because McCoy was the starter last year? Because a guy whose career record as a starter is 6-14 and he will "divide the locker room" if rookie Brendan Weeden takes his job?

Or because McCoy will be looking over Weeden's shoulder in practice?

No, he won't, unless McCoy is on a stepladder.

The fact is, watching McCoy and Weeden at the Browns' organized team activities, Weeden is the superior physical specimen. He is taller, wider and has the stronger, more accurate arm.

Anyone can see that, including McCoy and his teammates.

That's critical because players are bottom-line guys. They want to win and win now. If Weeden looks like the better player, they will want him to start -- regardless of how much they respect McCoy, or if they believe McCoy was not given a fair shot.

In pro sports, talent rules.

Is McCoy thrilled with being in camp, knowing the team is committed to Weeden?

Of course not.

Does he sense that, for all the talk of "competition" for the starting quarterback's job, it belongs to Weeden unless something drastic happens?

Yes, he does.

Does he like it?

Obviously not, but he handled questions about it professionally, trying very hard not to say anything controversial.

While he talked about earning a starting job as a high school and college quarterback, this is the first time in his life that McCoy knows someone else will take his spot in the lineup. That's never happened to him.

But it happens to most NFL quarterbacks at some point.

How many times has everyone from Derek Anderson to Frank Ryan to Rex Grossman to Ryan Fitzgerald to Kyle Orton to Vinnie Testaverde to Tim Couch been in and out of the lineup?

Yes, Tim Couch.

In 2002, the Browns were 9-7 and made the playoffs with Couch. But he was injured, and Kelly Holcomb had a huge playoff game during a loss in Pittsburgh. The next season, coach Butch Davis opened the year with Holcomb.

There was no outcry that Couch had to be traded. He stuck around, won the job back and eventually lost it again as his body was turned to raw meat after all the sacks and pounding of his early days with the Browns.

The rarity is the quarterback who starts and remains a starter for the same team for most of his career.

McCoy should realize that, just as he must know that no team was demanding his services -- or he would have been traded already.

So why should the Browns walk away from a 25-year-old quarterback who has started 20 games and should improve in his third season? The only reason to do so is if McCoy creates a distraction with his attitude, and that doesn't appear to be the case.

Besides, it's likely the backup will start some games -- no matter who opens at quarterback. Only once (Couch in 2001) did a Browns quarterback start all 16 games.

Yes, the Browns have Seneca Wallace, another veteran quarterback.

Weeden praised Wallace for being extremely helpful in the early days of camp, a good move for Wallace's career.

But if there is a choice between a 31-year-old Wallace making $3 million a year and McCoy at $550,000 -- remember, these contracts are not guaranteed -- why not go with McCoy? He is younger, cheaper and far more likely to take a step forward in his career than Wallace.

If McCoy is smart, he will "compete" for the starting job, embrace the backup role if that's his assignment, and the Browns would be wise to give him the chance to do so.

http://www.cleveland.com/pluto/blog/index.ssf/2012/05/good_backup_quarterbacks_are_v.html

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Browns Fans: Don't Kid Yourself, Brandon Weeden IS The Guy.

Joe Chaffin--Analyst C.B.R.

This isn't anything new to the average Cleveland Browns fan, but Brandon Weeden will start on September 9th against Mike Vick and the Phillidalphia Eagles. There has been plenty of speculation on whether this QB competition was "real" or not. And it's totally 100% not "real". Yes, Colt McCoy took the first initial snap of the OTAs this morning but that means absolutely nothing. image


Whether you agree with it or not, they're going to make Weeden "earn" his starting role. Even though the entire front office and coaching staff knows he's starting Week One. It doesn't make that much sense to me to have an open competition with two guys when you already know who's going to win it regardless of the production in the off-season.


Weeden and McCoy have been taking snaps back and forth throughout the first OTA but don't expect that to last too much longer. We need to have Weeden take as many snaps with the first team as possible just like Andrew Luck in Indy, RGIII in Washington, and Tannehill in Miami. We didn't draft a 28 yr old in the first round if we didn't think he was the guy.

 
Even our own GM Tom Heckert said "We fully expect Brandon to be the guy." So there's obviously no reason in thinking about a competition anymore. Brandon Weeden is the starting QB for the Cleveland Browns. Period. And I still wouldn't be surprised if Colt McCoy was no longer a Cleveland Brown come opening day.
But this "competition" is garbage and I don't buy it even a little bit . Go Browns!

http://www.clevelandbrownsreport.info/2012/05/browns-fans-dont-kid-yourself-brandon.html

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Josh Cribbs on his way out with the Cleveland Browns?

By Eric Schmidt

Will the fans of the Cleveland Browns be seeing WR/KR Josh Cribbs on the field for the last time in 2012? Jeff Schudel of the News-Herald seems to think it’s a very distinct possibility. Because of the changes to the kickoff rules last season, there is less value in paying a large salary to a player which excels only at that specialty. In fact, there have even been some discussion this offseason that perhaps the NFL might do away with kickoffs entirely in the future.Cribbs

Cribbs is under contract this season and will earn slightly less than $1.5 million. In addition to returning kicks, Cribbs also plays on special teams and was the Browns second leading receiver last season posting a career high 41 receptions. Cleveland sorely needs pass catchers and was mysteriously quiet during free agency regarding that position despite a surplus of receivers on the market this offseason.

Cribbs is a fan favorite and a player which is actively involved in the local community. Allowing Cribbs to walk next season would likely be another terrible publicity move for a franchise which simply cannot afford too many more. The fan base is restless and desperately wants to embrace a winning team. Since 1990, the Browns have posted a winning record just three times and since 1989, have only reached the playoffs twice.

http://www.thepigskinreport.com/2012/05/josh-cribbs-on-his-way-out-with-the-cleveland-browns/

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Competition starts in Cleveland pitting Weeden, McCoy

BEREA, Ohio -- Brandon Weeden looked comfortable. In fact, he looked like a starting quarterback in the rookie minicamp played out over Mother's Day weekend, but the job isn't his yet.weeden and mccoy

Phase Two of Weeden's indoctrination began the next day when he, Colt McCoy and Seneca Wallace were near each other in the locker room, sitting in the same meeting room and on the practice field together throwing passes to the same receivers.

Browns coaches are able to compare their quarterbacks side by side in the 45 minutes daily the CBA allows instruction to be carried onto the practice field.

In other words, the real competition has begun.

"Yeah, but I kind of thought that way coming in (to minicamp)," Weeden said. "We're human beings, and I think that's one thing that gets misinterpreted. We're going to help each other and get better. We're all playing for the name on the front of the jersey and we're all going to compete to have the best team and win as many games as possible.

"I'm going to be asking questions to those guys. They've been doing it for a couple years, Seneca for 10. Absolutely I think we're just going to compete. Nothing will change. I know Colt's a good guy. I know Seneca's a good guy. I met Seneca, so I'm looking forward to just being part of the other quarterbacks."

Weeden was picked 22nd in the first round last month, and even though the coaches and front office say competition will be open it will be a shock if Weeden doesn't win it.

The simple move would be to cut McCoy or trade him now that Coach Pat Shurmur, team president Mike Holmgren and general manager Tom Heckert all say Weeden will make suspect receivers better because Weeden is an accurate passer with a strong arm.

It's feasible the Browns might decide to part ways with Wallace instead. McCoy was supposedly the better quarterback last year. McCoy should improve in his third year, even if he doesn't start.

Wallace is scheduled to make $2.4 million in 2012. McCoy has a $540,000 salary. Keeping a backup earning almost $2 million less than the other guy seems logical if only because it creates salary cap room.

Weeden threw crisply and with velocity during the minicamp. There was no pass rush, so it wasn't a game conditions setting, but that doesn't change the fact he passed well and with authority. He did not look lost. He was poised like a veteran.

"I think he genuinely operated well," Shurmur said. "Other than a couple of plays, he did almost everything under center and I think he handled that extremely well. He is very accurate. You can see he throws a good ball. You could see that he has a chance to be a very good player."

During the draft Shurmur, Heckert and Holmgren insisted the Browns were not trying to trade McCoy. Shurmur said he expected McCoy to be in Berea for the offseason program the Monday after the draft and sure enough McCoy was there. He wants to compete with Weeden for the starting job because, if only in McCoy's opinion, it's his job to lose.

http://www.prosportsdaily.com/articles/competition-starts-in-cleveland-pitting-weeden-mccoy-662017.html

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Colt McCoy Through the Lens of Brady Quinn

By Craig Lyndall

Browns fans are understandably terrified of a QB controversy. The days of Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn (not to mention Charlie Frye) will do that to you. I’ve already been on record that I think it is a possibility that Colt McCoy might beat out Brandon Weeden, at least initially, because of his experience in the Browns’ offense. Still, despite all the moving parts and an ultimate desire to win ASAP, some Browns fans are so bitten by the Brady Quinn past that they think the only option is for Colt McCoy to be gone.image

They might be right. I might be missing the boat completely on this thinking that this mix of quarterbacks can coexist. It does seem similar to Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn in some ways. On the one hand you have the somewhat smaller guy with questionable arm strength with Colt McCoy and Brady Quinn. On the other you have a guy who fits the stereotypical QB mold in terms of height and ability to hurl the ball like Derek Anderson and Brandon Weeden. And other than that, there just isn’t much similarity between the controversies of the past and potential conflict now.

One of the biggest problems with the D.A. vs. B.Q. situation was that Browns fans kept echoing the sentiment that “we need to see what we have in Brady Quinn.” That phrase became so common at one point that it made me want to scream just because everyone was using the same exact phrase. Is there anything worse than a localized cliché that peppers sports talk radio and website comment sections? I digress. The current situation with Colt McCoy is totally different than when we had to see “what we have in” Brady Quinn.

In Brady Quinn’s entire Browns career, he played twelve games total. When most were clamoring for him to play, he’d only played in three games total. The Browns and Romeo Crennel had probably seen enough in practice to keep him firmly planted to the bench, but Browns fans hadn’t. The same can’t be said of Colt McCoy. Some Browns fans will undoubtedly want to see more and say that Colt didn’t have a fair shake. Holmgren even said it, I guess. But even with that, Browns fans have seen 21 games of Colt McCoy’s handiwork. This doesn’t even mention that Colt McCoy was a third rounder and Brady Quinn was a first rounder.

I can and will argue that a team’s fanbase almost always deserves the right to see a first-round QB play at some point. Brady Quinn is really an outlier for a first round quarterback. Consider this. Brady Quinn is a first round quarterback and he’s only started 12 games in his NFL career. Andre Ware started six, but Ryan Leaf and Akili Smith both made it over 20 before they were washed out of the league. Jamarcus Russell? 25 games for the dreadful first overall pick to the Raiders. J.P. Losman has had 33 by comparison. What I am saying is that Brady Quinn is exceptional in a bad way because even as he is apparently not good enough to play in the NFL if you trust multiple organizations talent evaluation, he has had precious little opportunity to prove to fans that he’s that big a bust. It really is difficult to draft a guy in the first round who is so incapable of being a starting QB that the fans of the drafting team don’t even get a chance to see him play. Controversy is difficult to avoid at the QB position with such an unbelievable lack of ability to even garner a chance.

To be fair to Quinn, a lot of that had to do with the push and pull of Phil Savage and Romeo Crennel in one of the most dysfunctional Browns team situations of all time. Yes, that is saying a lot, but it is true. For all the losses that have been piled up since Mike Holmgren has been here, it is a night and day difference from a culture standpoint at least so far. At least there is no hint of a coach flipping a coin to determine who will be playing the most important position. That’s not a punchline either. There is nothing funny about a coin toss QB rotation unless it happens in a rival city.

Now, as I said in the opening paragraph, I am one of the few people who thinks Colt McCoy can still win the job. I might have already talked myself out of it though because it occurs to me that is the only way to cause a QB controversy. I’ve constantly looked at this thing assuming Colt McCoy gets handed the backup role and how he would deal with it. A more important question is how well would Colt McCoy have to play in order to keep the fans from clamoring for Brandon Weeden?

It still seems to me that McCoy and Weeden are the types of guys who will be able to handle it. It also seems like Holmgren, Heckert and Shurmur will be decisive enough to stave it off.

http://www.waitingfornextyear.com/2012/05/avoiding-controversy-with-colt-mccoy/

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Rookie opts for law school over NFL

by Zack Kelberman

Andrew Sweat spent the last two years in college, starting at linebacker on the Ohio State Buckeyes defense. Although he went undrafted, the Browns signed him as an undrafted free agent and extended an invite to attend their spring minicamp.

Apparently, that’s as far as his pro career will go.image

On Monday, Sweat tweeted that he’s opting for law school over the NFL, a decision prompted by the highly-publicized concussion issue recently brought to light around the league.

Concussion symptoms didn’t want to risk it.. Thanks to the browns for the opportunity. Health trumps football any day

— Andrew Sweat (@asweat42) May 14, 2012

Shortly after, the website Deadspin wrote a column critiquing his choice to pass up a potential six-figure salary for the rigors and inevitable stresses of law school.

Sweat didn’t take too kindly to the press.

@Deadspin might need to get facts right. “good setup” my dad has a very successful law firm think I’m okay here..

— Andrew Sweat (@asweat42) May 14, 2012

Last season, Sweat was concussed during a game against Purdue, and the injury ultimately cut short his senior season. It’s admirable that he’s putting his long-term health first and foremost, while still chasing a dream, not just a paycheck.

http://network.yardbarker.com/nfl/article_external/rookie_opts_for_law_school_over_nfl/10796984

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Brandon Weeden believes he’s ready to start right away

Written by Paul Jackiewicz

Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback Brandon Weeden knows that the in order for his team to have the best chance to win now, he’s going to need to start right away.  The good news is that he believes he’s ready.image

“I feel like I’m ready,” Weeden said. “I have a long way to go, but I feel like I’ve taken the right steps to get to where I can play at that level.

“If I’m asked to be the guy Day One, I’m going to do everything on my part to put our team in position to win games and score points. I’m really anxious to get going and the season will be here before you know it.”

Weeden says that he’s been inspired by the rookie quarterbacks who started last season.

“You see guys like Andy Dalton and Cam Newton and Christian Ponder that came in, these guys played relatively soon. That’s what I mentioned to teams the entire time, that my maturity in baseball will help,” he said. “There’s going to be a learning curve. It’s going to be a challenge, but I have a lot of faith in my ability to play football.”

In order for the Browns to have any type of success moving forward, Weeden will need to start right away and I don’t believe he’ll have any problems proving himself to his coaches and teammates from here on out.

http://network.yardbarker.com/nfl/article_external/brandon_weeden_believes_hes_ready_to_start_right_away/10724867

Friday, May 4, 2012

What Could Browns Back-Up Seneca Wallace Teach Brandon Weeden? How To Carry A Clip-Board?

Cleveland Browns Back-up quarterback  Seneca Wallace comes out and says he would be willing to teach the Browns first round draft pick Brandon Weeden, Wallace wasn’t willing to help Browns starting quarterback Colt McCoy at all last year. Now Wallace wants to say it is a different situation, Wallace says he and McCoy were competing for the starting role and that is why he wouldn’t help McCoy at all. If Seneca Wallace is coming to Browns camp and he isn’t competing for the starting role in Cleveland then why have him there at all?image

Perhaps if Wallace would have helped out a little last year the Browns wouldn’t have finished the season at 4-12. Seneca Wallace as just proved to me and probably some other Browns fans he is a selfish payer. In-steed of working together as a team Wallace choose to not help out at all last year. I really do not think Wallace is the guy to teach Brandon Weeden anything. Weeden is a better quarterback than Wallace, and I’ll bet he isn’t as selfish as Seneca Wallace either. Their is no I in team. Wallace needs to learn that and he should have already known.

On Winning teams all the players work together for the good of the team. In my opinion it is time for Seneca Wallace to move on.

http://clevelandsports360.com/wordpress/what-could-browns-back-up-seneca-wallace-teach-brandon-weeden-how-to-carry-a-clip-board/

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

National pundits apply quite a grading curve in assessing Cleveland Browns' 2012 draft: D-Man's World

By Dennis Manoloff, The Plain Dealer

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- About 10 minutes into watching hours and hours of NFL Draft coverage on ESPN and NFL Network, or five minutes into reading about it on various Web sites and Twitter feeds, it became apparent that the majority of national analysts were unwilling to cut the Browns much slack. The slant did not change in the post-draft coverage. image

The pick of Alabama running back Trent Richardson third overall received high marks, but more than a few "experts" insisted Browns General Manager Tom Heckert got bluffed by Vikings GM Rick Spielman into giving up too much to move from No. 4. Never mind that nothing corroborated the claim: It sounded good, and involved the Browns, so it must have been true.

Beyond Richardson, the Browns might as well have selected 10 cardboard cutouts. The piling on was significant in the matter of No. 22 Brandon Weeden and reached a fever pitch for third-rounder John Hughes.

Weeden is a record-setting quarterback from Oklahoma State. He stands 6-4, has a quick release and throws fastballs all over the field, with accuracy. But he will be 29 in October and played in the spread offense, so he stands no chance to succeed at the next level. To hear the critics tell it, Weeden is:

• 75 years old and needs to be lifted from a wheelchair to join the huddle;

• Unable to throw a ball five yards;

• Making the transition from Pop Warner and won't be able to learn a single NFL play; and

• No better than an undrafted free agent.

That the Browns determined they needed an upgrade at the game's most important position did not matter. Nor did the reality that, after Weeden, there was a big dropoff in skill set and NFL readiness among his peers. That the Browns feared Weeden might not be there are No. 37 also was irrelevant. They "reached."

Just as knocks on Weeden's selection at 22 seemed to ease, Heckert opted for the relatively obscure Hughes, a defensive tackle from Cincinnati, at No. 87. Oh, the Hughesmanity! Cue the Hollywood director jokes.

In fairness to the national folks, local media and fans were down on the pick. Even the most ardent of Heckert supporters might struggle with John Hughes, let alone John Hughes at 87. His rating from numerous services was low, sometimes lower than low. Still, Heckert is paid to know infinitely more about these prospects and his team than those commenting on them, and Hughes had not even made it to rookie mini-camp.

By the end of the draft, the Browns had added: the best running back prospect since Adrian Peterson (Richardson); arguably the best pure passer in college football last year (Weeden); a starting right tackle (California's Mitchell Schwartz, No. 37); one of the fastest receivers in college football (Miami's Travis Benjamin, No. 100); depth to both lines and linebacker; and upgraded special teams.

Yet they were spinning their wheels.

The reception for Schwartz was lukewarm primarily because he was not named Bobby Massie, Jonathan Martin, Cordy Glenn or Mike Adams -- the right-tackle candidates who received much of the pre-draft publicity. Except that the earliest any of the other four went was No. 41 (Glenn), so every team except the Saints had a good look and passed. The supposedly superior Massie went 112th.

Perhaps instant second-guessing or thumb's down is the price the franchise pays for perpetual losing. Given that the picks were made by the lowly Browns, they must be busts-in-waiting. If you dare remotely "defend" the Browns, you are drinking brown-and-orange Kool-Aid or you are oblivious.

ESPN draft analyst Todd McShay kept pounding away on Weeden's inability to complete passes under pressure. No other quarterback struggles under pressure; just Weeden. Then McShay kept gushing about Boise State running back Doug Martin, who went 31st to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Martin was the second running back off the board. (Remember, though, the Browns were foolish to think Tampa Bay, whose first pick originally was No. 5, might want to trade up to No. 3 to get Richardson).

McShay was so excited about Martin, he stated in a post-draft show that Martin will finish his rookie year with more yards from scrimmage than "T-Rich." McShay must have had Jim Brown in his ear.

It was interesting to monitor the love for Martin and the dissing of Weeden. Critics could not wait to say Weeden played against suspect pass defenses, ignoring that Weeden played in the same conference, the Big 12, as Heisman Trophy winner and No. 2 pick Robert Griffin III. When assessing Martin, though, Boise State's comparatively inferior schedule was not held against him.

Weeden took hits for having the audacity to have Justin Blackmon as his principal target at Oklahoma State. If not for Blackmon, the storyline went, Weeden would have been average, at best. When assessing Martin, though, the fact that he played with quarterback Kellen Moore had nothing to do with his success. No running room became available as defenses were busy accounting for Moore, who finished with a mere 14,667 passing yards and 142 touchdowns in his four-year career.

While the Browns could do little right after Richardson in the eyes of the analysts, the rest of the AFC North repeatedly drafted 10-year Pro Bowlers.

The Steelers were lauded for taking Stanford guard David DeCastro at 24 -- and rightly so. DeCastro likely will be very good. But the endless praise for Pittsburgh's pick of Ohio State offensive tackle Mike Adams at No. 56 qualified as over the top. Suddenly, simply because he was going to Pittsburgh, Adams was going to be super-strong, a citizen of the year, and a "steal."

Miami (Fla.) outside linebacker Sean Spence was a middle-round projection according to numerous scouting services. In the run-up to the draft, there was minimal buzz surrounding Spence. But as soon as Pittsburgh took him at No. 86, he morphed into Joey Porter or James Farrior.

A strong case could be made that the Browns got the better linebacker prospect in James-Michael Johnson, a fundamentally sound player with a knack for finding the football. The Browns took him with their second pick of the fourth round, No. 120, but it barely registered a blip. At least NFL Network's Charles Davis had the guts to say he was bullish on Johnson.

The biggest example of Steeler bias showed through when Florida scatback and special-teams ace Chris Rainey was taken at No. 159. Rainey has talent, but his name only was whispered in the weeks leading to the draft. Why? Because of health and character concerns -- especially character concerns. All of the drawbacks vanished when the Steelers came calling. Rainey instantly became a multi-talented weapon who automatically will "fall in line."

The Bengals were universally applauded for taking Alabama cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick (No. 17), Wisconsin guard Kevin Zeitler (No. 27) and Penn State defensive tackle Devon Still (No. 53) with their top three. All quality prospects, to be sure. But the fawning over Rutgers receiver Mohamed Sanu (No. 83), Clemson defensive tackle Brandon Thompson (No. 93) and Georgia tight end Orson Charles (No. 116) was puzzling.

Sanu is hit-or-miss, as with most receivers in the class. Thompson wasn't as good as a senior as he was as a junior. Charles comes with baggage and is part of a weak tight-end class, but some made him sound like the next Tony Gonzalez.

The Ravens are known for their great drafts, so of course their first overall pick, Alabama linebacker/defensive end Courtney Upshaw (No. 35), is going to be a beast. Never mind that he slid because he is a 'tweener; he is going to be mentored by Ray Lewis, which means he will be the next Ray Lewis. Suddenly, Iowa State offensive tackle Kelechi Osemele (No. 60) is a high-value pick.

Even the biggest Ravens apologists were not sold on the remainder of Baltimore's draft. But Benjamin's teammate, receiver Tommy Streeter (No. 198), is undervalued for the same reason as Benjamin: Miami's inconsistent quarterback play.

http://www.cleveland.com/browns/index.ssf/2012/05/national_pundits_apply_quite_a.html