The NFL Draft is one of the most anticipated occasions on the calendar, but itĂąÂÂs just the start of the wait. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In todayâs FOX Sports Insider with Martin Rogers: Trey Wingo is set to host the FOX Sports Draft Watch Party, which will offer widely varying viewpoints on what should be a historic draft ... we take a look at Steph Curryâs historic run ... and we are treated to a beautiful story about a fan who experiences a dream weekend at UNC. The NFL Draft brings all emotions to the fore, especially for fan bases of those teams that have â how can we put this kindly? â been somewhat wasteful with their recruitment opportunities over recent years. If youâre a Kansas City Chiefs supporter, with the memory of landing Patrick Mahomes with the 10th pick in 2017 still flowing fresh through the psyche, Thursday and all it brings probably doesnât generate too much trepidation. However, for followers of the Chicago Bears and other franchises that have whiffed and wobbled the past few times theyâve been on the clock, things likely feel much more pressurized. And if youâre a neutral (is anyone truly neutral when it comes to the NFL?), the opportunity to potentially witness history being made makes this draft every bit a âmust see.â [STORY IMAGE 1] Just like the long-and-not-so-long suffering fans, the crew of the FOX Sports Draft Watch Party also come to Thursday nightâs drama with widely varying viewpoints. As he holds court over a team set to parse and debate each of the first-round selections over the course of several hours on Thursday night, Trey Wingo â who has covered the draft for the past 18 years but will be making his debut for FOX â is ready to embrace how this will be a draft like no other. âLast yearâs draft was very different in its execution,â Wingo told me, via telephone. âBut the run-up, the evaluation part where teams did all their homework, didnât change. There was a combine, most pro days were unaffected, there was a full college season. âThis time will be the complete opposite. The draft will look a lot more normal, but the build-up has been totally thrown askew. Some players played six games, some 13 games or some none at all. There was no combine. It is fascinating and it gives the teams even more to think about.â [STORY IMAGE 2] Wingo settled into a familiar routine once again; once the Super Bowl was over his thoughts turned immediately to free agency and the draft, spending his time continually talking to people in the know, evaluating players, speaking with front office staff, seeking to decipher as much information as possible. âIt is a weird dynamic,â he added. âThe players are doing all they can to make themselves seem as valuable as possible so they can be drafted higher and make more money. For the teams, though, they are all about maximizing the value of what they are getting, essentially seeing the picks as commodities that they have to get the most out of.â Wingo will be joined in the studio by T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Jordan Palmer, Geoff Schwartz, RJ Young and Jason McIntyre, and will interview former No. 1 picks Eli Manning and Michael Vick during the stream. For Houshmandzadeh, thinking back to his own draft experience will be unavoidable as the selections tick by from Cleveland. Coming out of Oregon State in 2001, Houshmandzadeh was expected to be taken no later than the third round, but eventually fell all the way to the seventh, going to the Cincinnati Bengals with the 204th selection. It was a slight that fueled his motivation throughout his career, but one that, he says, will never be forgotten. [STORY IMAGE 3] âHow can I put it ⊠it was, er, disappointing,â Houshmandzadeh chuckled this week. âI saw a lot of guys go ahead of me that I, and they, knew werenât better than me. It was disheartening. Honestly, it made me angry. But it actually motivated me. âPeople say I overachieved, but thatâs not right. I was just evaluated wrong. That is what we will see again, some guys evaluated too high, others too low. Thatâs part of what I like about the draft, that whole evaluation process and all the levels to it. But I sympathize with those guys that drop, because itâs hard.â It will be a draft that has more in common with what we were formerly used to, but is still greatly altered. The 2020 edition was so widely consumed because there was nothing else happening at the time and it provided all kinds of unique looks, including, yep, Roger Goodellâs basement. Bill Belichickâs dog made an appearance and we got to see plenty of diverse decors from the homes of key team personnel. This time there will be fans in attendance and some festivities allowed on the Cleveland waterfront, but a reminder the world has not yet returned to normal will still pervade. There certainly wonât be anything particularly normal about the top of the board, with the near-guarantee of quarterbacks being taken with the opening three picks and perhaps an unprecedented 1-2-3-4 run, if the Atlanta Falcons seek to either trade down or secure Matt Ryanâs long-term replacement. [STORY IMAGE 4] For Palmer, the draft is all about the QBs, with him having become an acclaimed guru in training and preparing players at the position. He has worked extensively with presumptive No. 1 pick Trevor Lawrence and will be casting a close eye over proceedings, as Zach Wilson seems sure to land with the New York Jets at two and then the San Francisco 49ersâ trade-up slot at No. 3 comes into play. One thing the analysts can agree on â no one is buying the narrative that San Francisco would be happy with any one of several different QBs, namely Mac Jones, Justin Fields or Trey Lance. âThey know who they were looking at when they made that trade,â Wingo said. âOr else they wouldnât have made it,â added Houshmandzadeh. Lawrenceâs status as the standout of this draft is the least dramatic piece to it all. For more than a year he has been locked into this spot, yet that shouldnât diminish the magnitude of what he accomplished at Clemson and the reality that heâs arguably the most highly-rated QB prospect to come out of college since Andrew Luck in 2012. Lawrence feels like a canât miss prospect until we reflect and remember that thereâs no such thing, which is why all the emotions of draft night should be held in a state of temporary suspension. There will be celebrations and devastation felt by various groups of fans over the course of the weekend. Thatâs all fine, and all part of the fun, but just remember that this is a guessing â and second-guessing â game. A great draft pick is only great ⊠when, and if, he becomes great. The draft is one of the most highly-anticipated occasions on the NFL calendar, but in many ways, itâs just the start of the wait. [STORY IMAGE 5] Hereâs what others have said ... Kevin Clark, The Ringer: âThis is the draft of chaos, marrying two wildly intriguing things: a bunch of quarterbacks who might go in the top 10, and a real lack of information due to a college football season and a pre-draft process severely impacted by COVID-19. ⊠What adds to the intrigue of this draft is that there is less information about these prospects than there has been in years. Truncated college schedules, top prospects who opted out of their seasons, a canceled combine, and a lack of private workouts, among other factors, have made evaluations harder. For some teams, this is a big deal, while others are taking it in stride. The 2021 draft is stacked with players at the most overanalyzed position and teams have less criteria to actually analyze them.â Arnie Stapleton, The Associated Press: âAbout the only certainty in the confounding 2021 NFL draft is Trevor Lawrence going to the Jaguars with the first overall pick. Beyond that, itâs really anybodyâs guess following the most unorthodox of run-ups to the leagueâs annual parade of prospects. COVID-19 opt-outs and shortened or shelved seasons in the fall were followed by the combine cancellation and the elimination of in-person interviews this spring because of the pandemic. ⊠All of this should result in a wild weekend of buildup for the 2021 season, when the NFL hopes sellouts replace opt-outs and normalcy returns in sports and society alike. ⊠Risk-takers might find gems this year, but the temptation will be to load up on 2022 picks when the pool of prospects will be much deeper â and, the hope is, better vetted.â Dan Pompei, The Athletic: âTeams that select quarterbacks high in the NFL Draft always have to embrace risk the way rock climbers do. This year, they are more like free soloists. It appears to be a dangerous year to be playing the quarterback game in the draft because there is less agreement on the top prospects than usual. That has been the case from team to team, and that has been the case within many draft rooms, where, as one front-office person said, âWeâre all over the board on these guys.ââ [IN OTHER WORDS] - Steph Curryâs historic run is not a shock to those who have seen him put in the work up close. [FOX Sports NBA Writer Melissa Rohlin has the story](.
- Want to add some fun to your NFL Draft viewing and maybe a few bucks in the process? [FOX Sports NFL Draft Analyst Rob Rang provides five NFL Draft prop bets to make](.
- Ever wonder what really goes into being a top-notch offensive lineman? [FOX Sports NFL Analyst Geoff Schwartz is here to educate you with his new show](. [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( Allow us to introduce you to the real big man on campus. Kendall Geer is a five-year-old diehard North Carolina fan who lives with Down syndrome. This past weekend, Geer was treated to an incredible VIP experience and behind-the-scenes look at Carolina athletics thanks in part to âDream 3â â a non-profit organization based in Charlotte that provides sports-themed experiences for people living with life-altering conditions. Geerâs experience included scoring a touchdown before the spring game, shooting hoops inside the Smith Center and even getting a new pair of Jordan sneakers. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Chicago Cubs at Atlanta Braves (FS1, 7:20 p.m. ET)
Kyle Hendricks takes the mound for the Chicago Cubs, who go up against Freddie Freeman and the Atlanta Braves. Los Angeles Lakers at Washington Wizards (ESPN, 7:30 p.m. ET)
Anthony Davis and the Los Angeles Lakers take on Bradley Beal and the Washington Wizards. Los Angeles Clippers at Phoenix Suns (ESPN, 10 p.m. ET)
Paul George and the Los Angeles Clippers battle Devin Booker and the Phoenix Suns. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet](
Alabama Players Selected In The First Round: Over 5.5 Stop us if youâve heard this before, but Alabama is expected to have a lot of players selected in the NFL Draft ⊠whatâs that? Youâve heard that before? Yeah, so have we, and it looks like the same story this year. We feel very confident about Jaylen Waddle (WR), Patrick Surtain (CB), DeVonta Smith (WR) and Mac Jones (QB) being selected in the first round. We also feel pretty good about standout running back Najee Harris being the first RB off the board in the opening round. After that, it probably comes down to offensive lineman Landon Dickerson and defensive tackle Christian Barnmore. Both Rob Rang and Jason McIntyre have Barnmore going No. 30 overall to the Buffalo Bills in their latest mock drafts. McIntyre has Dickerson going to the Green Bay Packers with the No. 29 pick in his mock, while Rang has him going early in the second round. With that said, you should feel good about taking the over of 5.5 Alabama players selected in the opening round of the draft. [WHAT THEY SAID] âIt has been fundamental to the success of professional sports.ââ Roger Goodell on the NFL Draft [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download FOX Sports App: [Fire TV](
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