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NFL

Decisions by Darnold, Rosen bring clarity to Browns' draft

The Cleveland Browns’ draft got simpler Wednesday night.

Decisions by USC’s Sam Darnold and UCLA’s Josh Rosen to enter the 2018 NFL draft mean the Browns can choose between the top two quarterbacks with the first overall pick.

The pick here is Darnold, the best pocket passer in the draft and a guy with size, arm strength and the ability to play the position.

When: April 26-April 28
Where: Arlington, Texas
NFL draft home page » | Projected order »

• 2018 draft QB class primer »
•InsiderTodd McShay’s Mock Draft 1.0 »
•InsiderMcShay’s Top 32 »
•InsiderMel Kiper’s Big Board »
• Kiper, McShay answer 25 questions »
• Underclassmen who have declared »

Rosen is close in ability — Mel Kiper and Todd McShay have him as the top-ranked quarterback — but given his obliquely stated preference not to play in Cleveland, the Browns would be wise to go with Darnold.

That would give them two young quarterbacks in Darnold and DeShone Kizer, whose final game of 2017 against Pittsburgh was impressive enough that he has to be in the mix.

Add a veteran who can play if needed and the Browns would be even better served. The thinking on Darnold is he is the best prospect, but he might not be ready to play right away.

That thinking can change. Carson Wentz was supposed to sit behind Sam Bradford as a rookie, but he earned the right to be on the field for the Eagles in 2016. The same could happen with Darnold and Kizer.

If the Browns could head toward the 2018 season with a quarterback group that includes a veteran, Kizer and Darnold, it would be a quantum upgrade from the 2017 group that featured a rookie Kizer, Brock Osweiler and Cody Kessler.

The Browns don’t need to overthink this. Taking Darnold is the best option, though if their rankings have Rosen as the clear better choice, so be it. Take him, then chuckle if he threatens to sit out. Either way, it’s a clear picture.

As for the No. 4 overall pick, this is also simple.

There are two players who could go at that spot, both of whom would be immediate upgrades (on paper): Penn State running back Saquon Barkley and Alabama defensive back Minkah Fitzpatrick.

Barkley would step in for Isaiah Crowell, who appears likely to leave via free agency. Fitzpatrick, who has the ability to play corner and the versatility to play any secondary position, could step in immediately.

There are some who say the defensive back takes precedence over a running back and that it’s not wise to take a running back fourth. There might be merit to the thinking. Teams have had success finding backs in lower rounds; Crowell was undrafted. A top defensive back can make a huge difference to a defense.

But Barkley is a special player who’s worth going against the grain. Think Todd Gurley when pondering if drafting a running back high is wise. There would be nothing wrong with Barkley at No. 4.

The draft in some years is a complex web of tough decisions. In other years, the picture is clear.

This year, the Browns are fortunate. The picture is clear.

With the first pick, they should take Darnold (with Rosen as the alternate). With the fourth pick, it should be whoever is left or better ranked between Barkley and Fitzpatrick.

NFL

Highsmith exits Packers front office for Browns

Alonzo Highsmith climbed the ranks of the Green Bay Packers personnel department in his 19 years with the team, but the senior personnel executive won’t be in the mix for the team’s vacant general manager job.

He told ESPN.com on Tuesday night that he will join the Cleveland Browns as vice president of football operations. The move reunites Highsmith with new Browns GM John Dorsey, the former Packers director of college scouting.

The 52-year-old Highsmith said he did not think he would be considered as a replacement for Packers GM Ted Thompson, who will not return in that role next season.

“We discussed so many ideas and all kinds of stuff,” Highsmith said in a phone interview from Cleveland. “I was exposed to so much stuff today. That’s why I thought it was as great opportunity. It feels good to go somewhere that you feel like you’re trusted.”

  • Ted Thompson will not return as the general manager of the Green Bay Packers. Thompson will remain with the Packers as senior adviser to football operations, and the team will conduct a search for a new GM.

Highsmith on Monday was granted permission by the Packers to interview with the Browns and flew to Cleveland on Tuesday. He spent the day watching film with Dorsey and meeting with the Browns’ staff, including owner Jimmy Haslam.

“This is an opportunity to build something from the ground up, having an input, working with John Dorsey, who I respect a great deal,” Highsmith said. “To watch his work ethic today — we watched film all day. He made me feel rejuvenated. It was a lot of fun today.

“I understand they’ve had their difficulties in the past, but I kind of feel like when I went to the University of Miami. Every recruiter from Alabama to Notre Dame to Michigan told me if you go to Miami, you’ll never go to a bowl game. We became a dominant program. It kind of feels like that all over again, and that’s my mindset. I’ve never lost, and I don’t plan on losing now.”

The third overall pick in the 1987 NFL draft as a running back from Miami, Highsmith worked his way up the ranks of the Packers’ personnel department. Hall of Fame GM Ron Wolf hired him as a college scout in 1999, and he was promoted by Thompson to his current position in 2012. Along with Eliot Wolf and Brian Gutekunst, Highsmith was one of Thompson’s top advisors.

Highsmith is best known for convincing the Packers to draft Donald Driver in the seventh round out of Alcorn State in 1999 and discovering undrafted free agent Sam Shields in 2010. Driver became the Packers’ all-time leading receiver, and Shields went on to make the Pro Bowl in 2014.

“It was a great 19 years,” Highsmith said. “I hope I did my part for the Packers to make them better. Now I’m gone and you know what, I won’t be the last guy.”

In fact, it’s possible Wolf or Gutekunst — or both — could leave Green Bay if they don’t end up as Thompson’s replacement. Packers president Mark Murphy said Tuesday that he understood the risk that he could lose some of the team’s top scouts if they don’t get the general manager job.

“We’ve got some good people here and you don’t want to lose ’em,” Murphy said. “But I also think the most important thing is getting the right person.”

NFL

Source: GM assigned to new role with Packers

Ted Thompson, the man who drafted Aaron Rodgers, hired Mike McCarthy and built a Super Bowl champion, will no longer be in charge of the Green Bay Packers’ personnel department, a source told ESPN’s Chris Mortensen.

The news was first reported by the NFL Network.

Thompson is expected to remain with the Packers in an advisory role, but the team will conduct a search for a new general manager.

The Packers have four strong internal candidates in Russ Ball, Brian Gutekunst, Alonzo Highsmith and Eliot Wolf, but the search also is expected to include outside candidates. That could include former Packers scouts Reggie McKenzie and John Schneider. McKenzie and Schneider, however, are general managers with the Raiders and Seahawks, respectively, and the Packers likely would have to make a trade if they wanted one of those candidates.

Ted Thompson, 64, has been in charge of the Packers’ football operation since 2005. Adam Wesley/Green Bay Press Gazette via USA TODAY Sports

After Schneider, a native of nearby De Pere, Wisconsin, signed an extension last year with the Seahawks that runs through 2021, he told reporters that his new deal with Seattle does not include an out clause that would allow him to leave for the Packers’ front office (he didn’t confirm or deny a report that his previous contract with Seattle included such a clause).

Another former Packers personnel executive, John Dorsey, is off the board after he was hired as the Browns’ general manager last month.

Packers president Mark Murphy is expected to address the GM situation Tuesday.

Thompson, 64, has been in charge of the Packers’ football operations since 2005. His first-ever draft pick was Rodgers. Thompson then fired Mike Sherman as head coach after the 2005 season and hired McCarthy. Together, they won Super Bowl XLV, the Packers’ first title since Super Bowl XXXI.

A former linebacker for the Houston Oilers, Thompson broke into scouting with the Packers under Hall of Fame GM Ron Wolf in 1992. He stayed with the Packers until 2000, when he left to join former Packers coach Mike Holmgren with the Seahawks. He served as Seattle’s vice president of football operations until 2005, when former Packers president Bob Harlan hired him as the Packers’ general manager.

Thompson curtailed his scouting schedule in recent years following hip replacement surgery and delegated more authority to his deputies. Ball, the Packers’ chief contract negotiator, took on many of Thompson’s administrative duties. Ball is viewed as one of the leading candidates to take over for Thompson despite having a background in finance and not player evaluation. If Ball gets the job, the Packers could pair one of their top scouts — Gutekunst, Wolf or Highsmith — with Ball. However, the Packers could lose any or all of those scouts if they’re bypassed for the GM job.

This will be the first football hire for Murphy, who became president in 2008. Because the publicly owned Packers don’t have a traditional owner, Murphy is head of the seven-member executive committee. Murphy informed the committee Monday that the team would conduct a search for a new GM.

ESPN’s Brady Henderson contributed to this report.

NFL

Fans brave cold, welcome Bills back to Buffalo

CHEEKTOWAGA, N.Y. — It’s been 18 years since the Bills made the playoffs, and a little frigid weather wasn’t going to keep Buffalo from celebrating.

  • The Bills partied like it was 1999 after the Bengals’ win over the Ravens got Buffalo to the playoffs for the first time in the new millennium.

  • The Bills reached the postseason for the first time since 1999 after beating the Dolphins on Sunday, but they were kept on pins and needles until the Bengals took down the Ravens before celebrating.

1 Related

With the temperature at 2 degrees, fans ditched their New Year’s Eve plans to welcome the postseason-bound Bills at Buffalo Niagara International Airport early Monday morning.

Buffalo ended the longest active playoff drought in U.S. pro sports Sunday after winning at Miami.

“Buffalo wouldn’t be Buffalo if it wasn’t for people coming out here in weather like this,” said Kyle Bower, a Bills fan who happened to be visiting from West Palm Beach, Florida.

The Bills landed shortly before 1 a.m. and were met by a few hundred fans, who had been chanting “Let’s go, Buffalo!” and singing the team’s touchdown celebration song, “Shout!”

Welcomed home by the best fans in the world.

WOW. #GoBills pic.twitter.com/wSdKx9g2JW

— Buffalo Bills (@buffalobills) January 1, 2018

As the team disembarked, fans chanted “We want Kyle!” for defensive lineman Kyle Williams, a 12th-year pro and the longest-tenured player on the roster. Williams was in tears as he passed the fans.

Supporters formed two rows and watched as players drove their cars in a procession down the middle to exit. One fan held a sign that said “Party Like It’s 1999,” a reference to the team’s last playoff appearance. Buffalo hasn’t won a playoff game since 1995.

• Schedule, coverage »
• Primer: Bracket, Super Bowl paths »

About 40 cars had gathered in the parking lot by midnight, and many of them honked to ring in the new year in a festive, frosty scene.

“We were just excited. A perfect night to come out and support the team,” said Kristin Cahill, who was with her son, Joseph Kemp. “This hasn’t happened in his lifetime. He’s 16.”

Her son suggested greeting the Bills after the team tweeted its travel plans for the trip back from Miami.

“He brought it up, and I said, `Let’s go.” Cahill said. “We didn’t have any plans.”

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