Do you know why I love the NFL Draft? In the 2018 draft class, roughly $165.2 million dollars were handed out. Oh, and that was just the signing bonus money for the top 10 picks. From Baker through Rosen, one-hundred and sixty-five million dollars in guaranteed money alone.

With your first round pick, and your higher picks, you’re making them rich. Like rich, rich. When you make that investment in a player, you’re giving them the tools to change their lives. To be a true professional athlete. Of course they want to take care of their family, friends, get cars, sure. However, they can now invest in themselves. They can do this through their diet, personal trainers, and physical therapy at the highest level. So you’re basically giving that player the keys to their own kingdom.

With that being said, there are still ample amounts of “busts”. Matt Elam, Breshad Perriman, Arthur Brown, Sergio Kindle, and many others didn’t pan out to fill their full potential in the Ravens’ case. Whether it wasn’t the right scheme fit, injuries proved too detrimental to overcome, off-field concerns turned into real-world problems. Busts happen. It’s a part of the story.

Copious amounts of young players don’t receive the right combination of coaching and are left to figure out too much on their own. Several ‘Bama players have stated that as a member of the Crimson Tide they’re on a 24 hour 7 day routine that helps them walk the straight and narrow. In the N.F.L. players have more freedom, what they choose to do is their own prerogative, and rightfully so.

In my mind, there are two important factors that are quite difficult to measure, and you can’t put a number on...

1) How much do they love football?

Take a look at Ed Reed. How often did you hear about Ed Reed off the field? How often would Ed Reed miss games? His passion and love for the sport is unrivaled. You could tell through his play. Ed wasn’t the biggest guy, he ran a 4.57 at his combine, and was called “a pick without pizazz.” However... Ed Reed left it all on the field. He threw his 204 pound body around with blatant disregard for his own safety (and especially the safety of ball carriers).

Streaming live now with new 92 overall Ed Reed! Some head to head and trying to get coins for that Steve Smith. https://t.co/mgeRg9eJws pic.twitter.com/Ufoe5Rsayt — Gutfoxx (@Gutfoxx) August 10, 2018

Who would tell you Ed Reed ran a 4.57? He had arguably the greatest range of any safety of all time. That was because of his passion and his intelligence.

2) How intelligent of a player are they?

What a player lacks in pure athleticism an easily be overcome with intelligence. If you look at players like former Miami Dolphins line-backer Zach Thomas, he is a perfect example. He was a smaller dude by NFL standards, wasn’t the fastest or the strongest guy... but he would SMACK you in the mouth because he knew where you were going before YOU did. He had studied it, seen it, envisioned it already. In NFL Network’s series A Football Life, one episode covered former great linebacker Chris Spielman. He would project the upcoming opponent’s film onto a wall. He would line up, and go through the movements he was going to take in the game. By the time the game was played on Sunday he said, “I’ve already played the game three times.”

Unfortunately... for every Ed Reed... there are ten Matt Elam’s.

I’m banging the table for these prospects—

Can I please impress upon you-that he is being taught by some impressive Players since declaring for the draft. Calvin Johnson aka Megatron, is helping this young receiver https://t.co/XfCeqOvkzr — Robzcardz (@KC_DANN_35) April 20, 2019

Hakeem Butler is a Baltimore native. He unfortunately lost his mother at a young age and moved in with his aunt and uncle in Houston. His cousins are former UK basketball stars Andrew and Aaron Harrison. Butler is a hard worker and a more polished route runner than given credit for. He can truly do it all. His passion and work ethic for the sport are evident. He runs extremely clean underneath routes for his size. He is able to flip his hips and plant his foot in the ground to change direction extremely well. Butler is the most polished giant receiver since Calvin Johnson. He should garner being selected in the first round. If it weren’t for some questionable drops and a high drop rate, Butler would potentially be a top 10 pick.

Cameron Smith- LB, USC

Smith might not be a day one guy... or a day two guy... but he has a few attributes that show he’s quite a remarkable young man. If you watch the video above, Smith has other options aside from football. He loves wine making. Someone might watch that video and question his passion for football. However, Smith tore his ACL in November 2015 shortly after having three interceptions in a game against Utah. Something I’ve seen NO ONE talk about is how startling it is that Smith didn’t miss a game in 2016 following the injury. Smith tore his ACL... in November 2015... and was back in the starting rotation in August of 2016. Clearly he loves the game and put in the work to get back. Smith might not be a combine freak, but he did post an admirable 4.23s short shuttle time, and a 39 inch vertical. Smith has received unbridled praise from coaches and teammates alike as a high IQ player with great character.

All BBK does is make tackles. Plain and simple. Over the past two seasons he’s accumulated 260 tackles, including 173 this past season. A tad undersized, but again... his IQ makes up for it.

A couple more examples of the instinctual linebacker that is Ben Burr-Kirven. #NFLDraft pic.twitter.com/w61waKlRVP — Fair Shake Football (@FairshakeFB) April 22, 2019

Ben Burr-Kirven was all over the field for the Huskies and was one of our highest-graded linebackers this year. pic.twitter.com/pNsvFn4Pjq — PFF Draft (@PFF_College) April 17, 2019

Tre Watson- LB, UMD

The former Illinois LB turned UMD Terp hits hard. Really hard.

#Maryland LB Tre Watson (33) literally flattening Michigan State’s RG, clearing lanes for his teammates to have a clean bead on the RB.



I’d have to agree with @MDQue_33, this was one of his best games last season. pic.twitter.com/7kCSySFWvX — Andrew DiCecco (@ADiCeccoNFL) March 29, 2019

Crazy play at Michigan that led to an ejection of @TerpsFootball's Tre Watson for targeting. pic.twitter.com/2bksPjwAis — Michigan On BTN (@MichiganOnBTN) October 6, 2018

Watson was first team all Big 10, has posted two 100 tackle seasons, had 5 interceptions last season, and is a four time academic all Big 10 selection. Here is a little excerpt from a recent interview with Watson leading up to the NFL draft (via draftdiamond.com)

“You are working on your graduate degree in Masters of Public Health: Behavioral & Community Health. What do you want to do with that degree later in life?”

“So my undergrad was also Pre-Dental which is my ultimate post-football path of being an orthodontist. The MPH is to further the development I made in my undergraduate program and give me a well rounded knowledge base for the healthcare system, the insurance aspects of healthcare, and also for managing a health care facility.”

So lets get this straight on Watson. He’s a four-time academic all big 10 student athlete who wasn’t exactly majoring in one of the walk in the park majors some athletes undertake. He also stated that organic chemistry was his hardest course. So while he was laying out offensive lineman, he was studying hydrocarbon nomenclature, and doing it at an all conference level both in the classroom and on the field. He also had five interceptions, and ran a 4.14s short shuttle. He was a four year starter, and all big 10 last year alongside Devin Bush... so why aren’t we considering him a borderline day 1 prospect? Simply because he doesn’t run the fastest 40? Ravens... if you’re smart take this young man and don’t look back. Kenny Young and Patrick Onwuasor are both fine young linebackers, but Watson would be a yin to their yang. He excels at reading keys, filling holes, taking on blocks, and making tough stops. Young and Onwuasor both cover well and have great speed, but need some work filling the A gap on run plays still. That trio would be an awesome set, and provide good insurance should one of them inevitably miss a game or two. Rant over.

Deebo Samuel- WR, USC

Deebo just plays like a Raven. Like Cameron Smith he recovered from a horrible leg injury to be an all-world receiver for the Gamecocks again last season. He will route you up, run through you, and lay the cold shoulder on blocks in the run game. He also is an exceptionally dangerous returner. In fact, prior to his broken fibula in 2017 Deebo returned two kicks. Guess what his kick return average was on those two kicks? 97 yards. He scored on both. His release and routes might be best in show.

Deebo Samuel putting on a release clinic at the senior bowl practices.. sheeesh.. shade under 6’ weighing 216... this is impressive.. great feet.. has a plan.. and he can run.. definitely understands leverage.. who’s his receiver coach? pic.twitter.com/eR44ym6yok — CrockTIME (@eric_crocker) January 24, 2019

Pull that up on twitter and watch the rest in the thread. Deebo is going to be a problem for NFL defenses for years to come.

The Stanford Cardinals red-zone gameplan in 2018 went something like this...

JJ go run a fade and catch a TD. OK coach.

The defense knew it was coming. The cheerleaders knew it was coming. Even their ridiculous tree mascot thing knew it was coming. Still, no one could stop it. Listening to JJAW, the product of two former professional basketball players, talk about boxing out DBs in the end-zone is a thing of beauty. He’s an extremely talented receiver all around, and clearly a highly cerebral player. He’s quite reminiscent of a young Jordy Nelson.

Stanford WR JJ Arcega-Whiteside (@jjarcega_22) Highlights



There aren't too many WRs you'll trust more in the redzone. Just throw it up to No. 19 & there's a high percentage chance he'll come down for 6



60 REC 969 Yards 16.1 AVG 14 TD



Full Video : https://t.co/dwcHQF8UB8 pic.twitter.com/vXktBKoSeL — JustBombsProductions (@JBP_Official) December 16, 2018

Give me JJAW over NKeal Harry ALL DAY. Pushes vertically more, gets more separation, WAY better against the press, and even better at contested catches. pic.twitter.com/O79sVhIF1Z — Spencer N. Schultz (@ravens4dummies) April 16, 2019

Mecole Hardman- WR, UGA

Hardman may very well be my favorite player in this class. He was a 5-star high school QB turned receiver. He runs a 4.31. However, the reason I love Hardman is because he’s willing to do the dirty work. He played gunner on the punt team, and made a few big hits wrapping up returners. He runs through contact better than anyone I’ve ever seen with his smaller size and outstanding speed. His 4.31 translates to the field, and he makes corners look like they’re in slow motion. He’s an absolute freak, who has yet to come close to peaking as a receiver. You can tell how much he loves football because he brings grave intensity EVERY snap.

Mecole Hardman again. Too much speed pic.twitter.com/eI1Ao35936 — Steve Palazzolo (@PFF_Steve) September 8, 2018

5-star #UGA signee Mecole Hardman (@iiAm_Mesho) is an absolute freak. pic.twitter.com/2dZAfDqnap — UGA Football Live (@UGAfootballLive) April 23, 2016

One of the media’s favorite questions for NFL combine participants is “Who is the best player you played against in college?” Routinely during the 2019 combine, SEC players stated, “Josh Allen. His combination of instincts and IQ are evident on nearly every single snap. He certainly is a film-study all star. “He knew all of our plays before we ran them” has become a common phrase when opponents discuss Allen. He is a former walk on, changed positions, and clearly worked his tail off to become arguably the top prospect in this class. In my opinion he’s the #1 prospect in this class. The Ravens won’t sniff him without trading away the family farm, but I just wanted to acknowledge his greatness.

#Kentucky OLB Josh Allen — Can get to the QB with speed off the edge + counter moves. @NFLMatchup pic.twitter.com/8jXFVxVNRY — Matt Bowen (@MattBowen41) March 20, 2019

Heck of a play here by Kentucky OLB Josh Allen (Montclair, NJ). RB flows away near the goal-line and he finds work on the TE delay throwback deflection. pic.twitter.com/2GEh73FjZv — SpreadOffense.com (@SpreadOffense) September 14, 2018

One of my favorite plays of the college football season:



Kentucky edge rusher Josh Allen running with TE Jace Sternberger and breaking up the pass



Allen has the top pass-rush grade in the nation and he's dropped into coverage 101 times this year pic.twitter.com/NKl7fldlS2 — Steve Palazzolo (@PFF_Steve) October 29, 2018

Zach Allen- DE, Boston College

Dude is just an animal. I see so much JJ Watt in his game it’s scary. In almost any other draft Allen would be a consensus top 15 pick. The strong DE/OLB class drives him down the board a tad, but he’s a first round talent. He moves extremely well for his size, but plays as strong as his size suggests. His hand usage is outstanding, often plowing through blockers with a nasty bull rush. Mean, tough, gritty, day one starter, and four down capable.

Zach Allen is going to be a PROBLEM. First round pick. Book it. #nfldraft pic.twitter.com/89eSXWkBnC — Spencer N. Schultz (@ravens4dummies) April 11, 2019

Since I said that... pic.twitter.com/Tv3z2z1g0O — Spencer N. Schultz (@ravens4dummies) April 11, 2019

Garrett Bradbury- Center/Guard, NC State

Converted to play center from tight end, and plays like he wants people to stop saying it. He’s mean, nasty, and tough. He’s a TAD undersized, but plays much bigger than he is. He wants to pummel you into the earth, but the NCST grad is also an avid reader. He and his roommate/QB Ryan Finley started a book club among teammates, and every interview you see of Bradbury his intellect isn’t hard to distinguish.

"You need a center, this guy is going to man that position for you for the next 10 years."@MoveTheSticks with high praise for Garrett Bradbury



: 2019 #NFLCombine Day 1 | Live on NFL Network pic.twitter.com/fLWrOfOKnh — NFL Network (@nflnetwork) March 1, 2019

NC St OL Garrett Bradbury said he embraces the game within the game. Enjoys being the QB of the offensive line. Said he’s working out as @TeamEXOS in Phoenix. pic.twitter.com/pLPf3GEgbg — TURRON DAVENPORT (@TDavenport_NFL) February 28, 2019

Want a fun film to watch...



2016 NC State O vs Clemson D



Young wide eyed LG named Garrett Bradbury was out here taking names!! Always looking for work!! pic.twitter.com/Ru2XTki2G6 — Ben Fennell (@BenFennell_NFL) February 26, 2019

Erik McCoy- Center/Guard, Texas A&M

Mecole Hardman, Terry McLaurin, Chase Winovich, and Mr. Erik McCoy are my favorite players in this draft. McCoy is simply the best pulling center I’ve ever seen. His combination of footwork, low center of gravity, ability to engage his hips, and drive a defender off the LOS are outstanding. I’m hanging my hat on a healthy Erik McCoy being a 10 year starter and being an all-pro in the NFL. He’s perfect for the Ravens. Humble, works hard, talented, and he put Quinnen Williams on his rear. He handled Alabama and Clemson admirably who boast somewhere between 8-12 NFL caliber players in their front 7’s.

Erik McCoy might be the highest rated player on my board that ppl aren’t talking about. At center here vs Dexter. pic.twitter.com/sn1SgqhlJG — Jon Ledyard (@LedyardNFLDraft) February 1, 2019

Going through some of last year’s football highlights today and I came across this gem. @Erik_McCoy_73, I found the start of your @WWE audition tape. pic.twitter.com/rJTgnVqk3m — Dalton Hughes (@_DaltonHughes) May 14, 2018

Erik McCoy, to nobody’s surprise, is suited out despite dealing with knee and ankle injuries over the last few weeks. One tough dude... pic.twitter.com/1xq6bA4uxD — TexAgs (@TexAgs) October 13, 2018

Erik McCoy, to nobody’s surprise, is suited out despite dealing with knee and ankle injuries over the last few weeks. One tough dude... pic.twitter.com/1xq6bA4uxD — TexAgs (@TexAgs) October 13, 2018

Check out Lufkin's own Eric McCoy #64 flatten a UCLA Bruin on this TD run. @Erik_McCoy_73 @AggieFootball #LufkinU pic.twitter.com/l7fZFsj1GP — Joe Martinez (@JoeMartinez007) September 4, 2017

Chase Winovich- OLB/DE, Michigan

Winovich posted freakish agility numbers at his size at the combine: 4.59s 40 time, 4.14s short shuttle, and 6.94s three-cone time. He has excellent get off at the line, and is dominant both against the run and pass. He has heavy hands that he uses to pull off a push-pull move that sends tackles and tight ends flying, while propelling Winovich towards his target. Wino gives me goosebumps. I’ll just let the film do the talking.

Probably my favorite part of the Amazon series was this bit from @Chase_Winovich - "I SAID BLOCK ME" pic.twitter.com/g6YPInIYNV — Stephen Osentoski (@StephenToski) July 21, 2018

Impossible to ignore Chase Winovich's fanatical effort, even when you're not studying him. pic.twitter.com/WYqTSEW0jx — Alex Kozora (@Alex_Kozora) April 19, 2019

Chase Winovich flies through the hole and blows up the RB clearing the way for a Noah Furbush sack #GoBlue #OutbackBowl pic.twitter.com/BLRChhDpH2 — Michigan Sports News (@SportsGuyMI) January 1, 2018

His status for Saturday is uncertain.



But @Chase_Winovich's role as a leader throughout this memorable @UMichFootball season isn't in doubt: pic.twitter.com/NejPMx8jWl — Michigan On BTN (@MichiganOnBTN) November 23, 2018

Chase Winovich was one of several guys at the mall signing autographs today. He took a moment to chat with me. He doesn't need to be in a helmet and pads to get fired up! pic.twitter.com/QI4xwz5oWS — Kristi Kopanis (@Kristi_Kopanis) March 23, 2019

Terry McLaurin- WR, Ohio State

Ohio State’s website has a great breakdown of McLaurin and his outstanding work ethic, “nothing short of durable, he played in every game between 2015 and 2018 – 54 total – and started 32 times … he totaled 75 career receptions for 1,251 yards … he was also an outstanding special teams player on punt coverage; one of the best in the nation, in fact … McLaurin scored three touchdowns in Big Ten title games at Lucas Oil Stadium in his home city of Indianapolis, including a game-igniting 84-yard catch-and-run for a touchdown in the win over Wisconsin in 2017.”

Pundits always talk about Michael Thomas shocking them in the NFL and how strange OSU’s offense is to try to predict which players will succeed at the next level. Many think Parris Campbell is “The next Michael Thomas.” I do like much about Campbell’s game, but McLaurin is going to take off at the next level. He brings his hard hat and lunch pale every play. He was arguably the best gunner in college football over the last few years.

Ohio State WR Terry McLaurin... Helping wherever he can @TheTerry_25



No ones wants to talk about special teams & punt gunning around draft time. But when it comes August and roster spots filling up - everyone suddenly interested!



McLaurin will do the dirty work too! pic.twitter.com/8J1Qoqr9lT — Ben Fennell (@BenFennell_NFL) March 20, 2019

#OhioState’s Terry McLaurin on competitive trash talk, meeting w/ the Bears, more. He is a well-spoken young man.

Todd McShay: Jon Gruden said #Buckeyes WR would be in NFL for "a long, long time" b/c he can play any WR position....via @TonyGerdeman pic.twitter.com/rMpiihPKk2 — Buckeye Fans Only (@buckeyefansonly) January 25, 2019

The Terry McLaurin thread starts now.



We begin pretty simple.



- Efficient release off the LOS. No false steps.



- Easy speed quickly eats up cushion.



- Uses the slightest of hand tugs to take advantage of his leverage.



- Enormous separation and gone to the races.



He good. pic.twitter.com/ovvoow2J5l — Carter Donnick (@CDonScouting) February 23, 2019

WR Terry McLaurin of @OhioStateFB looks smooth here, turning around Texas' Kris Boyd. Ref saw possession and feet in bounds.

Throw: Trace McSorley.#SeniorBowl pic.twitter.com/Z4axMMXwlU — Chase Goodbread (@ChaseGoodbread) January 24, 2019

Here are some of the other prospects that I think possess a brilliant blend of toughness, passion, smarts, and ability:

Diontae Johnson, Riley Ridley, Taylor Rapp, Nate Davis, Trayveon Williams, Elijah Holyfield, Jalen Hurd, Lamont Gaillard, Maxx Crosby, Sione Takitaki, Greg Dortch, Miles Boykin, and Jerry Tillery.

I hope that DeCosta is favoring these players come April 25th. With these smart, yet hard-nosed junk yard dogs, the Ravens will be in the best place to compete in 2019 and beyond. If we can come away with 4 of those prospects, then this draft will be a glowing success as DeCosta’s first.