Other AFC West Teams discussion

How many of Daniel Jerimiah's T150 (by round) ended up in AFC West, when did AFC West teams select them, and who won the AFC West (Day 1, Day 2, T150) per Jerimiah:
  • #3 Jeanty (1.6) Raiders (2200)
  • #10 Barron (1.20) Donks (1300)
  • #13 Hampton (1.22) Dolts (1150)
  • #37 Simmons (1.32) Chefs (530)
  • #52 Bech (2.58) Raiders (380)
  • #54 N. Williams (3.85) Chefs (360)
  • #65 Harris (2.55) Dolts (265)
  • #78 Porter (3.68) Raiders (200)
  • #80 S. Jones (3.101) Donks (190)
  • #88 Grant (3.99) Raiders (150)
  • #93 Royals (4.133) Chefs (128)
  • #97 Caldwell (3.86) Dolts (112)
  • #99 Harvey (2.60) Donks (104)
  • #105 Bassa (5.156) Chefs (84)
  • #112 Robinson (4.134) Donks (70)
  • #116 Gillotte (3.66) Chefs (62)
  • #122 Lambert-Smith (5.158) Dolts (50)
  • #135 Pegues (6.180) Raiders (38.5)
  • #149 B. Smith (7.228) Chefs (31.8)
Day 1:
  • Raiders (1): 2200
  • Donks (1): 1300
  • Dolts (1): 1150
  • Chefs (0): 0
Day 2:
  • Chefs (3): 1018
  • Raiders (3): 730
  • Dolts (2): 377
  • Donks (2): 294
T150 Totals:
  • Raiders (5): 2968.5
  • Donks (4): 1664.0
  • Dolts (4): 1577.0
  • Chefs (6): 1195.8
Conclusions:
  • Spyguy did not just win the AFW West, he crushed his rivals
  • After not scoring on Day 1, Chefs bounced back on Day 2, had the most picks in Jerimiah’s T150, but added the least value
  • After good Day 1’s, Donks and Dolts had weak Day 2’s and showings in Jeremiah’s T150
 
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How many of Daniel Jerimiah's T150 (by round) ended up in AFC West, when did AFC West teams select them, and who won the AFC West (Day 1, Day 2, T150) per Jerimiah:
  • #3 Jeanty (1.6) Raiders (2200)
  • #10 Barron (1.20) Donks (1300)
  • #13 Hampton (1.22) Dolts (1150)
  • #37 Simmons (1.32) Chefs (530)
  • #52 Bech (2.58) Raiders (380)
  • #54 N. Williams (3.85) Chefs (360)
  • #65 Harris (2.55) Dolts (265)
  • #78 Porter (3.68) Raiders (200)
  • #80 S. Jones (3.101) Donks (190)
  • #88 Grant (3.99) Raiders (150)
  • #93 Royals (4.133) Chefs (128)
  • #97 Caldwell (3.86) Dolts (112)
  • #99 Harvey (2.60) Donks (104)
  • #105 Bassa (5.156) Chefs (84)
  • #112 Robinson (4.134) Donks (70)
  • #116 Gillotte (3.66) Chefs (62)
  • #122 Lambert-Smith (5.158) Dolts (50)
  • #135 Pegues (6.180) Raiders (38.5)
  • #149 B. Smith (7.228) Chefs (31.8)
Day 1:
  • Raiders (1): 2200
  • Donks (1): 1300
  • Dolts (1): 1150
  • Chefs (0): 0
Day 2:
  • Chefs (3): 1018
  • Raiders (3): 730
  • Dolts (2): 377
  • Donks (2): 294
T150 Totals:
  • Raiders (5): 2968.5
  • Donks (4): 1664.0
  • Dolts (4): 1577.0
  • Chefs (6): 1195.8
Conclusions:
  • Spyguy did not just win the AFW West, he crushed his rivals
  • After not scoring on Day 1, Chefs bounced back on Day 2, had the most picks in Jerimiah’s T150, but added the least value
  • After good Day 1’s, Donks and Dolts had weak Day 2’s and showings in Jeremiah’s T150

Interesting reads, and I'm guessing you are enjoying compiling and posting. Is anyone arguing with you, or are you just being yourself and having fun?
 
Interesting reads, and I'm guessing you are enjoying compiling and posting. Is anyone arguing with you, or are you just being yourself and having fun?
I enjoy doing it. Don’t need any extra motivation. Every year we spend months reading big boards and mocks from draft gurus. I’m just following through and publishing what their pre-draft thinking means and how AFC West teams faired (or the teams at the top of the draft faired) based on JJ’s point value chart, which is used on draft day but then often forgotten by draft gurus.
 
Denver with best defense?


Boast arguably NFL's top defense

While the attention will likely be paid to how Bo Nix develops in Year 2, the most exciting aspect of the Broncos in 2025 is their defense.

Denver finished tied for the second-fewest yards per play (5.0) allowed last season, and surrendered the third-fewest points per game (19.0). They spent this offseason further bolstering that side of the ball, adding Dre Greenlaw and Talanoa Hufanga in free agency and using their first-round pick on nickel corner Barron.
 
Denver with best defense?


Boast arguably NFL's top defense

While the attention will likely be paid to how Bo Nix develops in Year 2, the most exciting aspect of the Broncos in 2025 is their defense.

Denver finished tied for the second-fewest yards per play (5.0) allowed last season, and surrendered the third-fewest points per game (19.0). They spent this offseason further bolstering that side of the ball, adding Dre Greenlaw and Talanoa Hufanga in free agency and using their first-round pick on nickel corner Barron.

They run a 3-4. Run at them, power man, duo.
 
PFF AFC West Offseason Grades

Fuck the Donks

DENVER BRONCOS: A

The Broncos ranked 10th in the NFL last season in team PFF defensive grade (74.1), as well as in the top half of the league in run defense, coverage and pass rush. Now, they’ve added Dre Greenlaw, Talanoa Hufanga and Jahdae Barron, among other depth players. That group could absolutely be the best in the NFL.

Throw in some key additions on offense, such as running back RJ Harvey via the draft and tight end Evan Engram via free agency, and you have one heck of an offseason in Denver.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: B

Trading Joe Thuney (80.0 PFF overall grade) was not ideal, but the Chiefs will hope Kingsley Suamataia (37.9 PFF overall grade) can fill in at guard better than he did at tackle. New signing Jaylon Moore, who felt like an overpay, could start at tackle while first-round pick Josh Simmons gets his knee ready.

Kansas City's draft was filled with scheme fits, and they retained Trey Smith and Nick Bolton. The receiver room could be better, but getting Rashee Rice back will help.

LAS VEGAS RAIDERS: A-

I am a big supporter of Pete Carroll and John Spytek leading the charge for the Raiders. I also loved the move to get aggressive and into a winning window with Geno Smith at quarterback. The team lost Robert Spillane and Tre'von Moehrig on defense in free agency — their two highest-graded run defenders, at 87.3 and 87.5 — but they brought in some free agency fliers, and their draft was excellent.


LOS ANGELES CHARGERS: C+

The Chargers' offseason grade might seem harsh, but they should have really stepped on the gas in their winning window. They were very quiet for a team with a lot of cap space, outside of signing Mekhi Becton late in free agency's opening window. Although the Najee Harrissigning looked good at the time, it feels a bit redundant after the team drafted Omarion Hampton in the first round.

Losing Poona Ford is also a tough look after he was the third-highest graded player (85.3) on Los Angeles' defense, after Khalil Mack and Tony Jefferson, last season. He ranked in the top five on the team in PFF pass-rush and run-defense grades. The Chargers will still be a good football team (even a playoff team), but I expected more improvements.
 
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