{"id":32693,"date":"2026-05-04T14:12:09","date_gmt":"2026-05-04T14:12:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/2026\/05\/04\/sound-smart-5-observations-on-the-biggest-post-draft-storylines\/"},"modified":"2026-05-04T14:12:09","modified_gmt":"2026-05-04T14:12:09","slug":"sound-smart-5-observations-on-the-biggest-post-draft-storylines","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/2026\/05\/04\/sound-smart-5-observations-on-the-biggest-post-draft-storylines\/","title":{"rendered":"Sound Smart: 5 Observations on the Biggest Post-Draft Storylines"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The NFL offseason \u2014 which is basically a whole season unto itself \u2014 is about to come to a screeching halt. Free agency has come and mostly gone. The draft is complete. And now, teams will likely wait until June 1 before making any more moves, because of the salary-cap and compensatory-pick considerations. (That\u2019s when we\u2019ll no doubt see the Philadelphia Eagles trade disgruntled receiver A.J. Brown.) But there is always something to discuss in the NFL offseason. Always. This is &#8220;Sound Smart,&#8221; where I try to spin forward, dive deeper and think outside the box. If I do my job, you\u2019ll have a better understanding of what really happened over the past week of the NFL offseason. 1. IF THERE\u2019S ONE THING YOU SHOULD KNOW, IT\u2019S\u2026 George Pickens\u2019 contract situation says one thing about the Dallas Cowboys \u2014 and another about the NFL. When it comes to extending the All-Pro receiver, the Cowboys aren\u2019t going to change the way they do business \u2014 not even after the Micah Parsons situation blew up last year. You know the story: Dallas and Parsons never agreed on a contract and negotiations went forgotten-milk sour. Parsons is now a Green Bay Packer. The Cowboys have players and picks to show for the trade. A new-look defense is under construction after last year&#8217;s version was putrid without All-Pro edge Parsons. And you\u2019d think maybe the Cowboys might be more generous with their players, perhaps to earn more goodwill \u2014 or perhaps to avoid fallout with another mercurial star. You\u2019d think wrong. At the NFL owners meetings in March, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones set the table for how negotiations would go with Pickens, calling the franchise tag &#8220;an integral part of our strategy over the next two or three years as we look to keep our best players.&#8221; And ahead of the draft, executive vice president and director of player personnel Stephen Jones doubled down. &#8220;We&#8217;ve made a decision that we&#8217;re gonna have George play under the franchise tag, which won&#8217;t be a first for us,&#8221; Jones said. &#8220;There won&#8217;t be negotiations on a long-term deal. That&#8217;s certainly not a first for this organization and won&#8217;t be a first in the league.&#8221; Pickens signed his franchise tag on April 30. On the Cowboys\u2019 end, this is a shrewd decision for roster management. It\u2019s what\u2019s best for the organization, forcing the receiver \u2014 who could likely have made $40 million per year (and probably on a three- or four-year deal) on the open market \u2014 to play for a one-year, $27.3 million deal. And with Pickens, it\u2019s important to note how he\u2019s not like CeeDee Lamb or Ja\u2019Marr Chase, veteran receivers who repeatedly proved themselves on and off the field before signing huge deals. No, Pickens is more of a wild-card, whose play had been spotty at times until he arrived in Dallas last season. And he only landed with the Cowboys because the Pittsburgh Steelers were fed up with him, shipping him off for a third-round pick. That isn\u2019t to say that Dallas&#8217; decision is fair. But it is analytical and calculated. The Cowboys aren\u2019t changing. Not for Parsons. Not for Pickens. Now for the NFL, it\u2019s yet another reminder of how little power the players have. At the owners meetings, Jerry Jones mentioned that Pickens entered the league under the collective bargaining agreement, which players negotiated. And so Pickens must follow the NFL and NFLPA\u2019s agreed-upon contract rules, which include the franchise tag. In other words, Jones is saying: Don\u2019t hold out, don\u2019t hold in, don\u2019t fight this franchise tag. But of course, Pickens doesn\u2019t have much of an alternative. When he entered the draft in 2022, the NIL era was not fully launched in college football \u2014 not like the raging business it is now. Nowadays, star players can stay in college and make plenty of money. As we saw in this year\u2019s draft, many do. But when it comes to going pro in football, the NFL has no competitor. And the league\u2019s contract system is extremely team-friendly. It prevented Pickens from cashing in and securing the long-term financial deal that he could absolutely demand, if not for the franchise tag. Because of that, Pickens has no real recourse \u2014 except to demand a trade and\/or to stage a holdout or hold-in. That doesn\u2019t seem to be on the table. Instead, he\u2019ll work to change the narrative that he\u2019s difficult to work with. He\u2019ll play on an improperly valued contract. And in 2027, if all goes well, he\u2019ll cash in big. 2. MONDAY MORNING CONTROVERSY Where in the world is Shedeur Sanders? Deshaun Watson is in pole position to start at quarterback for the Cleveland Browns in 2026,\u00a0per Cleveland.com\u2019s Mary Kay Cabot. And \u2026 my goodness, why and how? Where is Shedeur Sanders? This is one of the more promising Browns teams we\u2019ve seen in quite some time, which \u2014 I know, I know \u2014 might not be saying much. But I genuinely believe that Cleveland is agonizingly close to pulling itself out of the basement and away from the purgatory of rebuilding, year after year. But the Browns are not going to be competitive if they play Watson, one of the worst QBs in recent NFL history. I\u2019m not even being hyperbolic. Consider this telling statistic from ESPN\u2019s Benjamin Solak: Over the past 26 years, we\u2019ve seen 907 seasons of quarterbacks with 200 passing attempts or more. In 2024, Watson\u2019s season ranked 902nd in yards per dropback. And of course, the QB tore his Achilles twice since that season. That\u2019s your guy, Cleveland? So I\u2019ll ask again: Where is Sanders? I get it. In all likelihood, Cleveland will draft its guy in 2027 \u2014 and that will be the year the Browns can legitimately turn this around. Maybe it\u2019s as simple as: The Browns want to lose a lot of games in 2026 \u2014 to rise to the top of the 2027 draft (aka tanking). But that would surprise me. The Browns can\u2019t really afford to tank, not with GM Andrew Berry and head coach Todd Monken on hot seats. Yeah, that\u2019s right, they could both get fired. Monken hasn\u2019t coached a single down yet, but the Browns struggled to attract a top candidate in the 2026 hiring cycle, mainly because of the team\u2019s salary cap issues and quarterback issues \u2014 which all tie back to Watson. If they have a strong, young team with a high draft pick in a QB-rich 2027 draft, the Browns could hire a big-name coach or hot coordinator prospect. (Monken joined Cleveland after getting fired from his OC gig with the Baltimore Ravens.) Think about how the Chicago Bears attracted Ben Johnson with a well-timed hire a year after selecting QB Caleb Williams with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 draft. It\u2019s starting to feel clear that Sanders is not a part of the Browns\u2019 plan, that I\u2019m inserting him into the conversation \u2014 because he is not inserting or asserting himself as QB1. Time is running out. Now would be a great time for Sanders to step up. To prove he\u2019s &#8220;LEGENDARY.&#8221; 3. PEELING BACK THE CURTAIN Eric DeCosta did a brilliant job of defusing tension between NFL teams and the Consensus Draft Board. There has been an\u00a0ongoing discussion in the NFL about the &#8220;Consensus Board,&#8221; an aggregation of media-based big boards ranking the top draft prospects. It\u2019s an effort to use the immense draft data to set the averages. The discussion is often contentious after a team veers from the consensus ranking. But finally, the discussion took a more productive turn this week. And that was when Ravens GM Eric Decosta took the time to explain what he\u2019s seeing when he works with his team\u2019s board \u2014 and compares it to the consensus. &#8220;Over the last three years or so, more teams seem to be drafting the same as the Ravens,&#8221; DeCosta said on &#8220;The Lounge&#8221; podcast. &#8220;There seems to be an alignment in some ways of boards. And some of that might be based on modeling and analytics and more data being used, some of that data which is industry data and various things. I&#8217;m not sure if that&#8217;s good or not.&#8221; He said there are draft prospects he calls &#8220;outlier players&#8221; who he might rank, for example, as first- or second-round picks but who the consensus boards show as fourth- or fifth-round picks. &#8220;That was concerning except that, in most of those cases, those players were drafted closer to where we had them by other teams,&#8221; DeCosta said. &#8220;Meaning, they weren\u2019t falling [toward their consensus value]. \u2026 We see those guys getting drafted closer to 35 than 105. So what that tells me \u2014 and again, I think we\u2019re just scratching the surface on this \u2014 but it tells me that there are players that teams like that the consensus boards haven\u2019t heard about, valued properly or latched onto.&#8221; He added: &#8220;There are these outlier prospects that the teams know about that the consensus boards haven\u2019t caught up to.&#8221; DeCosta felt like the open access to data and analytics has helped the media\u2019s consensus board align more closely with teams\u2019 boards \u2014 particularly as the years go on. But they don\u2019t match universally. The entire discussion started with the examination of the San Francisco 49ers\u2019 draft class, which included a handful of &#8220;reaches,&#8221; when using the consensus board. In this year\u2019s class, 49ers receiver De\u2019Zhaun Stribling might be the best example of an &#8220;outlier player.&#8221; The 49ers took him at 33rd overall \u2014 despite him sitting at 85th on the consensus board \u2014 because San Francisco feared he&#8217;d get drafted soon after their slot.\u00a0Reports indicate that the 49ers were right \u2014 multiple teams had Stribling circled for Round 2. And all it takes is one other team. If the 49ers wanted Stribling, they probably needed to take him at No. 33. And it\u2019s now upon them to make sure he delivers upon that draft status. San Francisco GM John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan were not as open as DeCosta to talk about the process and the way the consensus board does (and does not) steer their line of thinking. They were more defensive and flippant, with Lynch saying, &#8220;We\u2019ve got consensus in this building. That\u2019s the consensus that I care about.&#8221; So I appreciate that DeCosta took the time to reach the draft community with a more generous spirit. 4. RANDOM RANKINGS Here are six sleeper rookies that I love for fantasy football. I\u2019ll do three for dynasty and three for redraft. Ted Hurst, WR, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Dynasty) The Bucs&#8217; offense came down to earth last year, which is why they pivoted from OC Josh Grizzard to Zac Robinson, an apple that fell off the Sean McVay tree. You can bet that GM Jason Licht drafted Hurst with Robinson\u2019s offense in mind, and the rookie wideout will join a unit that has some uncertainty at the receiver spots beyond Emeka Egbuka. Jalen McMillan has yet to take a full-time starting role and Chris Godwin is aging and oft-injured. Hurst is a developmental prospect out of Georgia State but has incredible physical abilities and was dominant at the FCS level. Maybe he breaks out in 2027. Mike Washington, RB, Las Vegas Raiders (Dynasty) New Raiders head coach Klint Kubiak ran a two-back backfield in Seattle. Now, Kubiak didn\u2019t have Ashton Jeanty last year, and it\u2019s likely the 2025 first-round pick gets a massive share of the touches. But there is a chance that Washington has a bigger role than expected, particularly given how ideally he fits Kubiak&#8217;s system. He will be a really good handcuff in Vegas. Chris Bell, WR, Miami Dolphins (Dynasty) Bell is the ultimate high-risk, high-upside play. He was an outstanding player at Louisville, where he would have likely earned his way into the top 50 picks in the NFL Draft. But he tore his ACL, which landed him in Round 4 and on a Dolphins team devoid of receivers. Can he earn a sizable role while overcoming the knee injury? Draft him if you want to be along for that journey. Ja\u2019Kobi Lane, WR, Baltimore Ravens (Redraft): If you want a late-round flier with high upside, Lane could be among the best options. Baltimore has long needed an explosive, outside option with good hands. That\u2019s Lane. He should supplant veteran receiver Rashod Bateman for playing time, and the question will simply be whether Lane can convert his snaps in a more efficient way than Bateman has. Justin Joly, TE, Denver Broncos (Redraft): The Broncos have been looking for a tight end who fits Sean Payton\u2019s sensibilities. (He wants another Jimmy Graham, but of course, those guys don\u2019t grow on trees.) It doesn\u2019t seem like Evan Engram or Adam Trautman have quite gotten it done in Denver. So Joly is a compelling guy, particularly if we see him running with the first-team in training camp. Jonah Coleman, RB, Denver Broncos (Redraft) I\u2019ll say it: I don\u2019t think second-round pick RJ Harvey was very impressive last year as a rookie. Not in fantasy. Not in reality.\u00a0He\u2019s not so impressive that a guy like Coleman can\u2019t vulture carries. And that\u2019s even more true of J.K. Dobbins, who will likely be Coleman\u2019s more direct competition. So if Coleman can steal Dobbins\u2019 job and eat into Harvey\u2019s touches, the rookie will be a really good fantasy option. But for now, that\u2019s a big if. 5. HE SAID WHAT?! *Silence* Normally, this is the space where I explore a controversial statement \u2014 or an exciting quote. But I want to explore an unusual silence that surrounded QB Fernando Mendoza, the draft\u2019s No. 1 overall pick. No one is talking about him. No one has really discussed him since the combine, when it became clear that he was the sure-thing at first overall. There\u2019s nothing controversial about the squeaky-clean Mendoza. From my vantage point, it has been intentional. Mendoza has made appearances here and there. He has let his aw-shucks persona shine. He has embraced his cultural achievements as one of the NFL\u2019s few Latino quarterbacks. And he has used his spotlight for good, raising funds for the National MS Society in honor of his mother. But he has not generated a compelling headline since winning the national championship. That\u2019s authentic to Mendoza, for sure. But it has all been in the name of securing the No. 1 overall pick. That didn\u2019t help draft ratings. That thrust undersized and inexperienced Alabama QB Ty Simpson into the pre-draft discussion as a sacrificial lamb in the embrace-debate TV world. But it was all to benefit Mendoza, who has made the leap to the NFL as quietly as any first-overall pick in recent memory. That includes understated personalities like Cam Ward and Bryce Young going to understated teams like the Titans and Panthers. Despite the lack of fanfare for Mendoza, you can count me as someone who believes in his prospects. Give him some time. He\u2019ll grow on people, both on and off the field. He may very well be a superstar in 2027.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The NFL offseason \u2014 which is basically a whole season unto itself \u2014 is about to come to a screeching halt. Free agency has come and mostly gone. The draft is complete. And now, teams will likely wait until June 1 before making any more moves, because of the salary-cap and compensatory-pick considerations. (That\u2019s when<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":0,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false},"categories":[2],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32693"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=32693"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32693\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=32693"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=32693"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=32693"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}