This
is the third segment in a triad of rankings as we gear up for the 2012 season.
First I ranked the quarterbacks. Then the top 100 players overall. Now,
the 32 teams, in reverse chronological order, starting with the lowly Oakland
Raiders.
32. Oakland Raiders
Last year: 8-8
Biggest Strength(s): Oakland has the best player in the NFL at two positions. Unfortunately, those
positions both involve kicking the ball. Shane Lechler is a 9-time All Pro
punter who booted the ball an NFL record 80 yards last year, and Sebastian
Janikowski is a drunk Polish kicker who has made 66 kicks of 50+ yards,
including an NFL record 63 yarder. Outside
of those two, the best players on Oakland
are probably DT Richard Seymour who is 32 years old, and Darren McFadden, who
has gotten injured in all four of his NFL seasons. They also have a pretty good
safety in Tyvon Branch and a solid left tackle in Jared Veldheer (Forest Hills
Northern grad!)
Biggest Weakness(es): Where to begin?
Quarterback, offensive line, pass rush, secondary … if you had to pinpoint one
primary weakness, it’s been drafting.
Would you believe that the last real 1st round pick Oakland made was way back in 2008? Since
then, they took Darrius Heyward-Bey with
the #7 pick (one of the dumbest 1st round picks ever), Rolando McClain #8 (an
amazing talent who unfortunately thought it would be real cool of him to almost
shoot a guy and get sentenced to jail), and then nobody in 2011 and 2012
because they traded those picks to acquire Seymour and Carson Palmer. You can’t go 4 straight years without a 1st
round pick. You just can’t. Especially not
in exchange for Carson Palmer, one of the worst starting quarterbacks in the
league. Oakland would have been just as good keeping
Bruce Gradkowski.
Oh, one other thing: Oakland committed 283 penalties last year, by
far the most in the league. In a distant second, with 247, is our Lions. League
average was about 200; Indy had just 160.
2012 Offseason: The Raiders best CB
last year was Stanford Routt, a borderline star, but they couldn’t afford to
re-sign him. He went to the Chiefs for
three years and $20 million. It was
probably smart not to pay him that much, considering Oakland was already over the cap. But anytime
you lose your best CB in two consecutive offseasons (remember Nnamdi in 2011)
it’s tough. Other than Routt, there
wasn’t much action this offseason. They did bring in a new head coach – Dennis
Allen, a 3-4 defense guy know n for the “bend but don’t break” philosophy. This
is their 7th coach in 11 years, and none of the previous 6 had a winning
record. In an effort to fill holes and address needs, the Raiders signed a
bunch of mediocre linemen and cornerbacks, but most of them were role players
or bench players last year on the Giants, 49ers, Texans, or some other good
team. Whenever a player chooses money and willingly moves from a good team to a
crap team, it’s a bad sign, and the Raiders have a roster full of such
players. Then, in the 2012 draft, the
Raiders forfeited their first three picks in exchange for Seymour, Palmer and
Terrelle Pryor, and didn’t pick until #95, where they took a guard from Utah , the eighth guard
off the board. Eek.
2012 Outlook: As the NFL transitions into a
full-blown passing league, the Raiders are headed in the opposite direction.
Their new offensive coordinator, Greg Knapp, concentrates on ball control and
field position. With the league’s best kicker and punter, that may actually be
a smart move for Oakland .
Last year, thanks to an easy schedule, some great kicking, a good amount of
luck, and a temporarily healthy McFadden, the Raiders somehow won 8 games. But
they won their 8 games by an average of 5.75 points and lost their 8 games by
an average of 15 points, including five blowouts with Palmer as quarterback. They actually went 4-2 without Palmer and 4-6
with him. That’s as ominous as anything.
2012 Schedule: The division is still
pretty weak, but Peyton Manning makes it more difficult. They also get the AFC
North and NFC South, which should only equate to 1 or 2 wins. But their bonus
games are two of the worst teams in the NFL: Miami
and Jacksonville .
2012 Prediction: With a new coach, new
offensive coordinator, a lousy quarterback, and no young players to build
around, this won’t be a good team. They
might overachieve towards another 8-8 season, but I expect the complete
opposite. If Palmer struggles right off the bat, backup Matt Leinart might take
over. New GM Reggie McKenzie inherited
Palmer and his horrible contract ($28 million owed in 2013 and 2014), so he’ll
probably try to avoid paying as much of that as possible. If Palmer stinks, he
might be out of a job sooner than later. The problem is, Leinart has no upside,
and once you put Pryor out there you’ve given up on the season. My prediction:
Palmer starts out 1-4, gets benched with a sub-70 QB rating, Leinart goes 1-3,
then Pryor gets a chance at the job, but goes 0-7 against the brutal part of
the schedule. McKenzie gets his wish - the #1 pick in 2013, and USC’s Matt
Barkley.
31. Seattle
Seahawks
Last year: 7-9
Biggest Strength(s): The Hawks were
actually decent on defense last year; granted, their schedule precluded them
from facing any elite quarterbacks They don’t have a pass rush, but they were
solid against the run and a few secondary players (namely the safeties, Earl
Thomas and Kam Chancellor) emerged as young stars. Also, the running game was
great at times, with Marshawn Lynch becoming possessed by the Tasmanian Devil
during a 5-1 streak in which he ran for an average of 102 yards per game.
Biggest Weakness(es): The two most
important things in today’s NFL - passing the ball, and rushing the passer. Seattle attempted to
shore up these positions with free agent Matt Flynn and 1st rounder Bruce
Irvin, but neither of those guys can be considered dependable until they prove
something.
2012 Offseason: As mentioned, Flynn
was brought in to replace Tavaris Jackson, which seems like a certain upgrade
on the surface. But Jackson
really wasn’t that awful last year. When the best receiver is undrafted rookie
Doug Baldwin, you can’t expect much. Seattle did nothing to
improve the receiving corps, and let’s be honest, Sidney Rice and Mike Williams
are incumbent bums. (No, I don’t consider Kellen Winslow Jr. an improvement.
Just an idiot.). Seattle
also needs to replace their best linebacker, David Hawthorne, who signed with
the Saints.
The best part of Seattle ’s offseason was supposedly the
re-signing of two key players: Lynch, and DT Red Bryant. In both cases,
however, the Hawks overpaid. I’d be especially nervous about giving $18 million
guaranteed to a proven slacker like Lynch.
2012 Outlook: Just like Oakland ,
Seattle
overachieved last year and won 7 games thanks to an easy schedule and a good
running game. But this year, their deficiencies in the passing game should
catch up with them, and a mediocre secondary should be exposed by an absent
pass rush.
2012 Schedule: The Seahawks avoided
Rodgers and Brady last year. Not this
year. They also get appointments with
Stafford, Romo and Newton .
But other than that, it’s a pretty easy schedule, provided the NFC West stinks
again.
2012 Prediction: Flynn may be 26 years
old, but he’s only played significant time in 3 NFL games. He’s basically a
rookie, joining a team with terrible receivers and a lousy offensive line. The
one chance this team has of not being awful is the running game, and as I
mentioned, Lynch’s contract could turn him into one of the league’s laziest
players. The defense should be average,
although the absence of a pass rush is going to continue to be problematic
unless Irvin turns out to be a brilliant pick. With an easy schedule though,
and a historically great homefield advantage, I’ll give Seattle 5 wins.
30. Jacksonville Jaguars
Last year: 5-11
Biggest Strength(s): Well, Maurice
Jones-Drew won the rushing title, so I guess you’d have to start there. He averages about 50 receptions per year over
the last six seasons, and has a solid career YPC of 4.6. He’s also a great
blocker, a good goal-line back, and amazingly durable (only 3 games missed his
entire career, playing through many injuries). But now, with the rushing title
under his belt, MJD is holding out for a payday. Foster and McCoy just got paid
($20 million guaranteed each), and Jones-Drew thinks he deserves a similar
contract. And he does. The problem,
however, is that nobody wants to pay a running back. They are perceived as
fragile, easily replaceable, and rapidly declining in importance. Jones-Drew
doesn’t fit that description, but countless running backs have produced early
in their careers and then plummeted when they reach the 2,000 carries plateau
that MJD is approaching. So while MJD technically deserves to be paid, more so
than fellow unhappy holdouts Ray Rice and Matt Forte, I would hate to give him
the 5-years and $40 million he wants if I were the GM. I’d much rather build a pass-first team and take
my chances on a guy like Maurice Morris for one-tenth the money. Kind of like
what the Saints, Packers, and Patriots are doing. But on the flip side, building
a successful pass-first team doesn’t really work when you have Blaine Gabbert,
so who knows. Maybe they should pay MJD. It might be their best chance at
keeping the franchise in Jacksonville
and not infuriating all the fans. I’m glad it’s not my decision to make.
The other strength of the Jags is their front 7 on
defense. They have two studly linebackers in Daryl Smith and Paul
Posluszny, a good DT in Terrance
Knighton, and a solid DE in Jeremy Mincey.
At times, the defense got shredded, but other times, like week 7 against
Baltimore , it
was completely dominant.
Biggest Weakness(es): Blaine Gabbert. Also, the secondary isn’t very good, and neither is the O-line,
but mostly, Blaine Gabbert. He was
beyond awful last year. It will be interesting to see how long the Jags stick
with him, or if they try to salvage the season with Chad Henne.
2012 Offseason: It was a pedestrian
offseason for Jacksonville (signed Henne, re-signed Mincey, got a mediocre CB
named Aaron Ross, viciously overpaid WR Laurent Robinson, hired a new coach
named Mike Mularkey), until draft day when they traded up to #5 to pick Justin
Blackmon, the top receiver on the board. This looked like a great move at the
time – Blackmon doesn’t have physical-freak skills like AJ Green, but he has
good hands, good route-running, better than average speed, and was supposedly a
high character guy. Then, early in June
he got arrested in Oklahoma
for drunk driving, which was pretty much the worst thing that could happen to
the Jags. [Insert “I’d be drinking too if Gabbert was my quarterback” joke]
Probably the only good part about the offseason was
watching Peyton Manning leave the AFC South. Between that and the Texans’
myriad of injuries and lost free agents, the division seems to be wide open. If
Jacksonville
has any chance at the playoffs, they better sneak in now before Andrew Luck
seizes his claim on the division for the next decade.
2012 Outlook: Unfortunately, that’s just not
going to happen with Gabbert and Henne as the only quarterbacks. Jacksonville is a classic example of a horrible offense
and a pretty good defense; perennial bottom feeders like Buffalo ,
Miami , and Cleveland
faced the same dilemma last season and all were under .500. If you’re going to try to win without a
quarterback, you need more than just a good defense. You need an unbelievably
good defense. Jacksonville
does not have that.
2012 Schedule: If Schaub doesn’t
come back healthy and Luck doesn’t start the season well, it’s possible the
Jags won’t face a good quarterback until week 8. That’s the good news. The bad
news is they face the tough AFC East and NFC North, which could equate to 0-8.
But their division is pretty weak and bonus games against Oakland
and Cincinnati
are winnable.
2012 Prediction: It all comes down to
whether or not Gabbert will improve in his sophomore season. You can’t do much
worse than a 65.4 QB rating and 50.8% completion percentage, but Blaine needs at least a 75 QB rating to keep Jacksonville somewhat
competitive. If Jones-Drew is signed
(and I suspect he’ll be paid late in the summer when the GM becomes desperate,
and I also suspect that he won’t be a lazy ass once he is paid) and if the
defense stays healthy, and if Blackmon and Robinson pan out to give Gabbert
some viable receivers, Jacksonville could win 6 or 7 games, maybe more if
Gabbert really improves.
Arm strength isn’t the problem; neither is accuracy
to be honest. Last year Gabbert was dreadful under pressure, and had no feel
for the pocket. This is reflected by his 40.2% completion percentage when under
pressure, and the fact that he led the league in fumbles despite ranking 22nd
in pass attempts. But offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski believes that
improved footwork will transform Gabbert’s game into something competent,
especially when the pocket collapses. I would like to share in his optimism …
but I don’t. Instead, I think Gabbert leads the Jags to a 4-12 year, but plays
just promisingly enough to keep his job all year.
29. Cleveland Browns
Last year: 4-12
Biggest Strength(s): Two stud players, LT
Joe Thomas and CB Joe Haden, anchor the Browns’ roster and prevent them from
being the biggest dumpster fire in the NFL. Now, #3 overall pick Trent
Richardson gives hope to the 29th ranked offense. Elsewhere, they’ve got a very good linebacker
in D’Qwell Jackson, who actually led the AFC in tackles; however, that was
largely a result of a terrible defensive line that couldn’t tackle anyone. The
rest of the linebackers – Scott Fujita, Chris Gocong – are pretty solid, and
safety TJ Ward is a young stud in the making. The secondary actually ranked 2nd
in passing yards allowed, but that was partly because the Browns fell way behind
and allowed teams to just run all over them, and partly because they only faced
1 of the 10 best quarterbacks in 2011.
Biggest Weakness(es): With the 30th best
run defense, 28th best run offense, 24th best passing offense, and a pretty
much nonexistent pass rush, there are plenty of weaknesses to address. The running game was probably solved with Richardson , but the rest
of the weaknesses remain. Rookie QB Brandon Weeden will probably start from the
get-go, replacing three-year veteran Colt McCoy who is actually 4 years younger
than Weeden. With quite possibly the worst group of receivers in the history of
the league, Weeden and/or McCoy will struggle. The defensive line is one of the
league’s worst as well, and stopping the run will continue to be a problem.
2012 Offseason: Drafting Richardson was a
no-brainer once the Browns determined that Ryan Tannehill was no good. Richardson will be one of
the most complete and productive RBs right away and is the heavy favorite for
Rookie of the Year. I’d even consider him a 2nd or 3rd round fantasy pick;
he’ll never be coming off the field and will lead the team in receptions. Drafting Weeden, on the contrary, was not
expected. Nor was it very smart. Not
only is Weeden 29 years old, he just wasn’t
that great in college. The Browns needed to improve the receivers and pass
rushers, and didn’t do either in the draft or in free agency. The offensive
line is solid, and Richardson
might keep them in games, but once again, the defense won’t be much help
outside of Haden.
2012 Outlook: In the third year of the Holmgren
regime, the Browns seems to finally be rebuilding. The recent eras of Anderson , Quinn, Delhomme, and McCoy have
been forgettable to say the least. None of those QBs have been surrounded by
any talent; in fact, Greg Little’s 61 receptions and 709 yards were both the
highest marks by a Browns receiver since Braylon Edwards’s amazing 2007 season.
Pretty sad when 709 receiving yards is considered a feat, because Calvin
Johnson had that in his last four games.
Both offensively and defensively, the Browns are
just undertalented. Holmgren and Tom Heckert have done a poor job putting this
team together, plain and simple. Even the coaches – Pat Shurmur, Brad
Childress, Dick Jauron – are underwhelming.
If Trent Richardson is as good as advertised, the Browns could make 2012
interesting. But if not, the Browns, who have only enjoyed two winning seasons
since 1994, will be miserable once again.
2012 Schedule: For the second
straight year, the Browns get a cake schedule outside of their division. The
regressing AFC West, the overrated NFC East, and the Colts and Bills. That
could actually be 4 wins right there. Plus, they might catch Denver
and/or Pittsburgh
resting starters in weeks 16 and 17, and I expect Cincy to regress quite a bit
this year in the AFC North.
2012 Prediction: Weeden and Richardson
will be aided by a weak schedule, but still won’t be able to do much. Asking a
couple of rookies to lead your offense is tough, especially with no receivers
to stretch the field. Once again, the Browns will fall behind early and often,
and won’t have the big-play offense to catch up. Plus their miserable run
defense will allow other teams to control the clock. It’s a bad combination.
Mike Holmgren has flat out proven to be a crappy team president. I see Cleveland going 2-6, then
losing 3 straight, then winning 5 straight, two of which are against teams
resting starters, for a bizarre 7-9 finish.
28. Miami
Dolphins
Last year: 6-10
Biggest Strength(s): The defense. Led by OLB
Cameron Wake, ILB Karlos Dansby and CB Vontae Davis, the Fins ranked 6th in
scoring last year and were 3rd best against the run. A big part of that was 385-pound
Paul Soliai, a Pro Bowler and one of the few remaining 3-4 nosetackles in the
NFL. (Sidenote: a huge number of NFL players – almost exclusively defensive
tackles – are coming out of the
Polynesian area. Guys with unpronounceable last names like Solaia, Peko, Pouha,
Sopoaga, Ta’amu, Alualu, Ngata, Misi, Kemaoutu, and of course, Troy Polamalu.) Anyway…
Biggest Weakness(es): The offense is not
just weak; it’s horrendous. Last year they ranked 22nd in yards, 20th in
points, 26th in third-down conversions, and 3rd in sacks allowed. Then, they
traded away their best receiver (an idiot with a long list of legal trouble,
but still a good player) and drafted Ryan Tannehill, who as I documented a few
months ago, is John Navarre 2.0. Not a
terrible player, but not even close to a franchise quarterback.
The offense was pitiful early in the season with
Chad Henne and the 0-7 start, but picked up steam with Matt Moore (a shockingly
decent 87.1 QB rating last year) late in the season. Reggie Bush had the best
season of his career, rushing for over 1,000 yards and a wonderful 5.0 YPC. Moore made use of Brian
Hartline, Anthony Fasano, and even some
guy named Charles Clay. So naturally, Miami bailed on him and chased every
other quarterback this offseason … Manning, Flynn, Griffin, even Alex Smith …
and after 4 failures, they opted to draft Tannehill with the #8 pick, when they
could have drafted a legitimate stud CB, DE, WR, OT, or anything else. Instead
of taking a sure thing, they rolled the dice, and probably threw away a top 1o
pick. Dumb, dumb, dumb.
Now, the Dolphins are in serious contention for the
worst offense in the league, and just like last year, the bad offense will
offset the good defense and the Fins will fail to win half their games.
2012 Offseason: Aside from
idiotically drafting Tannehill and trading Marshall for nothing, it was a pretty good
offseason. They resigned Wake and Soliai to long-term deals, and brought in new
head coach Joe Philbin, who coordinated the Packers’ unstoppable offense over
the last 4 years. Then, just to prove that owner Stephen Ross is obsessed with
attention, Miami
signed the world’s biggest idiot, Chad Ochocinco, early in June. I’m going to
do my best to ignore him until he goes away. Miami also signed with HBO to do the show Hard Knocks, which usually is indicative
of a team full of morons.
2012 Outlook: When the offense sucks and the
defense is great, eventually it gets too frustrating and the entire team falls
apart. Guys like Wake and Dansby and Davis
are going to get sick of working their butts off and losing by scores of 13-3.
Tannehill is almost certainly going to be the opening day starter, and will
almost certainly flop. Reggie Bush can’t possibly play 15 games again without
getting hurt, and 2nd year RB Daniel Thomas looked slow and crappy last year.
Also, the Fins rival Cleveland
for the worst receiving crew of all time. Seriously, Brian Hartline is your #1
playmaker?
I forgot to mention, Miami does have a couple of studs on the
offensive line, with LT Jake Long and center Mike Pouncey. But they also have
below-average players at the other positions; maybe rookie Jonathan Martin from
Stanford can fix that at right tackle and keep Tannehill from getting killed.
But probably not. A good offensive line can’t make a crappy quarterback
succeed. They can just buy him an extra couple seconds to be indecisive and
make bad throws.
2012 Schedule: With the Bills
improving this offseason, the six games against the AFC East are going to be tough.
But then there’s the AFC South and NFC West, probably the two worst divisions in
football. And bonus games with Oakland
and Cincy. So overall, a very easy schedule.
2012 Prediction: I’m inclined to say 6
or 7 wins because of the great defense and easy slate of games. But then I
think about Ryan Tannehill, and the 1-5 record he had in college against teams
ranked in the top 25. If you can’t beat Missouri
or Kansas State , how are you going to beat an NFL
defense? Especially with receivers that just aren’t NFL caliber.
Fortunately for Tannehill, Miami ’s schedule starts out easy and then
progressively gets more difficult. He should be 2-4 at the bye, and keep the
starting job. But then he’ll quickly fall to 2-8, and Philbin will have to
fabricate some kind of injury to Tannehill so Matt Moore can finish the season
and salvage a few wins, while not shattering Tannehill’s confidence. The
schedule ends rough, but the Pats might rest the starters in week 17, so I’ll
say Miami
scraps out a 5-11 record.
27. St. Louis Rams
Last year:
2-14
Biggest Strength(s): The Rams were
miserable last year, ranking near the bottom in every meaningful statistic.
It’s tough to find a strength. I guess
you could go with Jeff Fisher, a guy with 142 coaching wins and almost 30 years
in the NFL. Fisher brought with him Cortland Finnegan, a nasty cornerback who
probably becomes the Rams’ best player. The Rams also picked up two future
first round picks in the RG3 trade; if Washington
stinks (and I think they will), St.
Louis could be picking twice in the top 10 for the
next two years.
Other strengths include DE Chris Long, who is
proving to be a solid pass-rusher, and of course Steven Jackson, an aging beast
of an RB who still has something left in the tank, as evidenced by him
single-handedly beating the Saints last year with 191 yards and 2 TDs.
Biggest Weakness(es): With the league’s
worst point differential (-214) and the 31st ranked offense, there is plenty of
blame to go around. Certainly Sam Bradford’s ankle injury didn’t help, but even
when he played he was rotten. The receivers were terrible, and so was the
offensive line. The linebackers were bad, the secondary was bad and endured 13
injuries (not a typo), and even the special teams were way below average. But
probably the worst aspect of their 2011 season was the run defense – allowing
152 rushing yards per game, 31st in the league. Of course, that had a lot to do
with falling behind in the first 3 quarters and then getting run all over. In 7
of their loses, the Rams were trailing by 14, 19, 23, 24, 20, 19, and 14 going
into the final quarter:. That’s a good
recipe to rank 31st in run defense.
2012 Offseason: To fix the middle of
the defense, Fisher drafted LSU’s monster in the middle, Michael Brockers, a
huge specimen who will fill the important run-stuffing DT role that is needed
in a Fisher-esque wide-9 defense. The Rams also added Kendall Langford and
Trevor Laws, who both proved to be
capable run-stoppers last year. Combined with Finnegan, DE Williams Hayes (who
played for Fisher in Tennessee ),
and 2nd round pick CB Janoris Jenkins, it was a profitable offseason for a
wretched defense that couldn’t do anything except occasionally rush the passer.
Now, they might just be able to stop the run, which would allow DEs Long and
Robert Quinn to have really solid seasons.
Offensively, the Rams lost WR Brandon Lloyd, who
didn’t want to be there anyway, and they gained Scott Wells, a Pro Bowl center
from Green Bay .
They took a receiver in the 2nd round, Brian Quick, who I don’t know anything
about other than he’s from Appalachian State and he’s not actually very
quick. The biggest change is the health
of Bradford, who is supposedly 100%. Also slot receiver Danny Amendola should
be healthy, and Steve Smith (the former Giant, not the Panther) joined the
Rams, hoping to be at full health as well. That’s a lot of uncertainty, but at
least it’s some semblance of a plan.
2012 Outlook: The Rams are 15-65 over the last
five years, an average of 3-13. My guess is that Fisher alone gives them 4 wins
this year, even with this talent-depleted roster. If Bradford
stays healthy for 16 games and develops a rapport with one of his receivers,
and Steven Jackson stays healthy as well, and the defense works as good on the
field as it does on paper, this might just explode into a shockingly good team.
Like we saw with Cincy and Houston in recent years, sometimes adding a great
cornerback does wonders for a bad defense. And like we saw with San Fran last
year, sometimes a great coach can make an enormous change. But there are still
major holes on the O-line and D-line, and the linebackers are still pretty
lousy, so Jeff Fisher is being asked to do a lot with very little.
2012 Schedule: The Rams begin the
year in Detroit ,
and after that they get five very winnable games, and could be 3-3 or 4-2
heading into 3 straight loses (NE, GB, @SF). After that they should have a good
shot at winning 5 of their last 7 games, and could end up in the 7-9 to 9-7
range. Or, on the flipside, the Rams could start slow, and lose winnable games
to WAS, CHI, SEA, and MIA. If they do that, they’re basically 1-9 before they
know what happened. In other words, they gotta start out winning.
2012 Prediction: I’m taking the
optimistic route with St. Louis .
I like Bradford , I like Fisher, and I think
they’ll win early. I’ll say 7-9, with one or two shocking wins against SF. They’ll
be the trendy pick for 2013.
26. Minnesota
Vikings
...
Sorry for breaking this up. Turns out I wrote a lot. Maybe I can get this done by August.
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