Giannis Antetokounmpo, Eric Bledsoe Lead Bucks to Win over LeBron James, Lakers

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 1: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks shoots the ball against the Los Angeles Lakers on March 1 2019 at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images)

Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

Eric Bledsoe had a season-high 31 points and nine rebounds, and Giannis Antetokounmpo added 16 points and 15 rebounds, leading the Milwaukee Bucks to a 131-120 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday at Staples Center in Los Angeles.

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Bucks clinch a playoff spot with a win in L.A. 😤 https://t.co/nYay5trc7b

Milwaukee closed the game on a 15-2 run over the last 2:25.

LeBron James contributed 31 points, 10 assists and seven boards for the 30-32 Lakers, who have lost seven of their last 10.

Brandon Ingram also scored 31 on 13-of-21 shooting. He started the game by making his first nine field goals.

The 48-14 Bucks have won seven straight and 19 of their last 21. With the win, Milwaukee became the first team to clinch a playoff berth this season.

New, Improved Ingram Can Push Lakers to Playoffs

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There’s no such thing as a second-half All-Star, but if there were, Ingram would have an early case for a spot on the team.

Entering Friday, the 21-year-old forward had averaged 27.8 points on 56.7 percent shooting, 7.5 rebounds and 3.0 assists in his four post-All-Star break games. He also made 54.5 percent of his three-pointers.

Ingram posted 12.2 points per game on 43.8 percent shooting over the first two years of his career, which are respectable numbers but unspectacular.

However, the 6’9″ forward has been excellent of late, bringing up the question as to where the improvement has originated.

The first one is obvious: He’s a young and tremendously talented player who has found another gear. Ingram was just 18 years old when the Lakers drafted him second overall in 2016. Like any player, Ingram has to develop his game as he gains experience.

Second, Ingram’s scoring has improved since he came back from a sprained left ankle that sidelined him for seven contests, as Eric Pincus of Bleacher Report noted:

Eric Pincus @EricPincus

Not sure where the notion that BI is just getting his confidence comes from – he’s at roughly 20 ppg since he came back from injury in Dec

Ingram has averaged 19.7 points per game and shot 50.5 percent from the field since returning Dec. 21 compared to 15.2 points on 47.0 percent shooting beforehand.

Head coach Luke Walton pointed out a third reason after Ingram scored 23 points in a win over the New Orleans Pelicans on Wednesday:

“He’s [scoring] more consistently,” Walton said per Christian Rivas of SB Nation’s Silver Screen and Roll. “I think he’s done a nice job of cleaning up some of the shots that we don’t prefer that he takes, some of the isolation, mid-range pull-ups without moving it. He had a couple of them tonight, but for the most part, I think he’s continued to grow as a player.”

ESPN color commentator Doris Burke mentioned in the third quarter of the television broadcast that Ingram could get a shot any time he wanted. The third-year pro proved that Friday evening. He was able to effortlessly get off a few mid-range rhythm jumpers in addition to some buckets at the rim and a few threes.

The fourth reason comes from Ingram himself after the aforementioned Pels game, via Rivas:

“The closer I get to the rim, I think my percentages go up, so I’m just trying to find a way to the rim, find a way to be aggressive and either draw a foul or get over the top,” Ingram said. “If I draw a foul, I’m confident to know I can knock the free throws down.”

Ingram is right about his percentages. According to Basketball-Reference, the ex-Duke Blue Devil shot 68.2 percent from the field at the rim entering Friday. He’s making 39.6 percent of his shots elsewhere.

All of those reasons converged at a pivotal moment, when Ingram put Bucks center Brook Lopez on a poster:

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  2. Eight Years Ago, the Nuggets Traded Melo to the Knicks

  3. Two Years Ago, the Kings Shipped Boogie to the Pelicans

  4. ASG Will Be Competitive Again If the NBA Raises the Stakes

  5. Will Harden Burn Himself Out Before the Playoffs?

  6. When MJ Wore #12 After His Jersey Was Stolen Before a Game

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  8. 14 Years Ago, Iverson Dropped Career-High 60 Points

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  11. KD Giving Back to His Hometown with Durant Center

  12. Four Years Ago, Klay Drops Record 37 Pts in One Quarter

  13. Remembering the Night Kobe Scored 81 Points

  14. Happy 37th Birthday Dwyane Wade

  15. Steph Is a Few Shots Away from NBA 3-Point History

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  17. Steph Gifts Fan Who Asked for Girls UA Kicks with New Curry 6s

  18. Happy 34th Birthday to LeBron 👑

  19. 4 Years Ago, Kobe Passed Jordan on the NBA Scoring List

  20. Drummond and Embiid Reignite Rivalry

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The Lakers may be 3.5 games behind the San Antonio Spurs for the eighth and final playoff spot, and their playoff chances look bleak.

However, ESPN play-by-play announcer Ryan Ruocco made a good point on the television broadcast: The team simply does better when James and Ingram are on the court.

It just hasn’t happened often, which has played a large part in the Lakers’ slide outside of the playoff picture.

Ingram returned to the court right before James had to sit for an extended period because of a groin strain. And James was on the court when Ingram was out.

Those two haven’t played together much, but when they have, the Lakers have been 19-14.

That’s not a dominant mark, but if Ingram and James had been on the court together all year, we’d probably be talking about the Lakers’ push for home-court advantage in the first round.

Hanging with the Bucks, who were at full strength and sport the league’s best record, is an impressive feat. The Lakers can take their performancecoupled with Ingram’s development and continued on-court development alongside Jamesand know that they have a shot.

What’s Next?

Both teams play on the road Saturday. The Bucks will face the Utah Jazz at Vivint Smart Home Arena, and the Lakers will visit the Phoenix Suns at Talking Stick Resort Arena.

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A grandma floated out to sea on a large throne of ice and had to be rescued

It’s not every day a grandmother is crowned Queen of Icebergs, but when it does happen it’s quite the sight.

On a recent trip to Iceland, Judith Streng became that grandma after her son attempted to take a photograph of her sitting on an ice structure that resembled a throne at Diamond Beach in Jökulsárlón.Shortly after Streng sat down to pose, the piece of ice broke off and floated into the water.

 “When I got on it, it started to totter and a wave was coming in,” Streng told ABC News. “A very large wave came in and kind of made the throne kind of rock, and I could tell that I was slipping off.” 

SEE ALSO: The ‘grandpa’ of ASMR has created a heartwarming community on YouTube

“I thought it was safe,” Streng told ABC News. “One girl had been on it and then two girls at the same time, and it was very secure with them. But I don’t weigh very much. So it was a little easier to float off with me, I guess.”

Streng’s story went viral after her 24-year-old granddaughter Catherine tweeted a text message exchange she had with her father about the incident.

Catherine, who teaches English in Seoul, South Korea, explained via Twitter DM that her father painted a very vivid picture of the scene when the two spoke. He has a PhD in English, and described the event in the following words:

“She ascended the throne after a wave had pulled back and left it briefly exposed on the beach. Then a wave washed in and dislodged the ice throne, rocking it from side to side. When the wave retreated, it lifted the dislodged throne throne and carried her out with the tide.”

Luckily for the Streng family, Randy Lacount, a licensed boat captain from Florida with knowledge of water rescue strategies witnessed the whole thing, and was able to save the day.

“When I first got the text I laughed out loud at work because that’s just so something that would happen to my family,” Catherine said. She assured us that her grandmother is just fine and back from vacation, at home in Texas.

Long live the Iceberg Queen.

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Antonio Brown Trade Rumors: Raiders, Redskins, Titans Have Most Interest in WR

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown (84) acknowledges fans while leaving the field after an NFL football game against the Jacksonville Jaguars Sunday, Nov. 18, 2018, in Jacksonville, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

Phelan M. Ebenhack/Associated Press

The trade market for Antonio Brown appears to be heating up with three serious suitors for the Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver. 

Per ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the Oakland Raiders, Washington Redskins and Tennessee Titans have shown the most interest in acquiring Brown thus far. 

Brown’s tenure with the Steelers likely came to an end after nine seasons. The 30-year-old tweeted last month he and team president Art Rooney II “agreed that it is time to move on” after a face-to-face meeting that saw them air out their differences. 

Schefter noted Pittsburgh’s asking price for Brown “started out as a first-round pick and other compensation, but now has been reduced to a first-round pick.

It’s not a surprise the Raiders, Titans and Redskins would be interested in Brown. All three teams desperately need help at wide receiver.

Oakland’s top two pass-catchers in 2018 were 31-year-old tight end Jared Cook and 33-year-old Jordy Nelson. The Raiders certainly have the draft capital to strike a deal with three first-round picks this year, including the No. 4 overall choice.

Corey Davis was the only Titans player who had at least 60 receptions and 500 yards last season. No player on the team had more than four touchdown catches. 

Washington may have to remake its entire offense this offseason. The team is reportedly planning to play next season without quarterback Alex Smith as he recovers from a fractured tibia and fibula in his right leg, per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport

As the Redskins try to figure out their quarterback situation, they also need playmakers on the outside. Oft-injured tight end Jordan Reed led the team with 84 targets, 54 receptions and 554 yards last season. 

Brown, who is under contract for three more seasons, has had at least 101 receptions, 1,284 receiving yards and eight touchdowns each year since 2013. 

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Man with the best Chicago accent teaches us about plants

By Heather Dockray

It takes a very special kind of person to talk about plants and not put everyone in the room to sleep.

So I’m particularly thankful for YouTuber Joe Blowe, who recently posted this video about the plant life in Antioch Dunes, California. The video has blown up on Reddit partially because of Blowe’s impeccable, lovable Chicago accent, and partially because of his clear love for plants.

Someone make this man a middle school biology teacher ASAP. 

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Trae Young Drops Career-High 49 as Hawks Fall to Bulls 168-161 in 4OT Thriller

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 1: Trae Young #11 of the Atlanta Hawks shoots open floater against the Chicago Bulls on March 1, 2019 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Scott Cunningham/NBAE via Getty Images)

Scott Cunningham/Getty Images

The Chicago Bulls came out on top over the Atlanta Hawks, 168-161, in a quadruple-overtime affair at State Farm Arena in Atlanta on Friday night. It marks the first time since Dec. 7, 2006, per the Associated Press’ Tim Reynolds, that a team has scored at least 150 points in a loss.

Getting there was a wild ride. Hawks rookie point guard Trae Young hit a three-pointer with just over three seconds to play in regulation, which appeared to be the winning shot before Bulls forward Otto Porter Jr. was fouled while shooting a three.

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  5. Will Harden Burn Himself Out Before the Playoffs?

  6. When MJ Wore #12 After His Jersey Was Stolen Before a Game

  7. 15 Years Ago, LeBron, Wade and Melo Took Over All-Star Weekend

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  19. 4 Years Ago, Kobe Passed Jordan on the NBA Scoring List

  20. Drummond and Embiid Reignite Rivalry

Right Arrow Icon

Porter, who tied his career high with seven threes in the game and ended with 31 points, made all of his free throws with .4 seconds left and sent the game to overtime.

Young opened the first overtime period with a 27-footer beyond the arc and ended it by going coast-to-coast layup to tie the game at 140, forcing a second overtime.

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  2. Eight Years Ago, the Nuggets Traded Melo to the Knicks

  3. Two Years Ago, the Kings Shipped Boogie to the Pelicans

  4. ASG Will Be Competitive Again If the NBA Raises the Stakes

  5. Will Harden Burn Himself Out Before the Playoffs?

  6. When MJ Wore #12 After His Jersey Was Stolen Before a Game

  7. 15 Years Ago, LeBron, Wade and Melo Took Over All-Star Weekend

  8. 14 Years Ago, Iverson Dropped Career-High 60 Points

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  11. KD Giving Back to His Hometown with Durant Center

  12. Four Years Ago, Klay Drops Record 37 Pts in One Quarter

  13. Remembering the Night Kobe Scored 81 Points

  14. Happy 37th Birthday Dwyane Wade

  15. Steph Is a Few Shots Away from NBA 3-Point History

  16. Can Harden Keep His Dominance Going?

  17. Steph Gifts Fan Who Asked for Girls UA Kicks with New Curry 6s

  18. Happy 34th Birthday to LeBron 👑

  19. 4 Years Ago, Kobe Passed Jordan on the NBA Scoring List

  20. Drummond and Embiid Reignite Rivalry

Right Arrow Icon

Young was named the Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month for February and is the only rookie in the Eastern Conference with multiple 30-plus-point games. Four of his six such games have come after the All-Star break with back-to-back 36-point games entering Friday night’s matchup.

In this Hawks loss, Young continued that streak with a career-high 49 points along with 16 assists and eight rebounds. The No. 5 overall pick led all scorers.

ESPN Stats & Info @ESPNStatsInfo

The Hawks’ Trae Young is the 4th player over the last 20 seasons with 2 game-tying or go-ahead FG in the final 5 seconds of 4th quarter and OT, joining Victor Oladipo, Ray Allen and Kobe Bryant. https://t.co/AKPTfpxUKp

Zach LaVine led all Bulls with 47 points, including the layup that ultimately put the game out of reach for the Hawks. The point guard leads the Bulls on the season with 23.2 points per game. Forward Lauri Markkanen scored 25 points—his 12th game in a row with at least 20 points.

What’s Next? 

The Bulls and Hawks will play each other one last time this season in Chicago on Sunday at 3:30 p.m. EST.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available. Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app to get the game. 

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Galaxy S10, S10+ will come with pre-installed screen protector

The Galaxy S10 is Samsung's 10th version of its flagship Android phone.
The Galaxy S10 is Samsung’s 10th version of its flagship Android phone.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

Angela Moscaritolo

for

PCMag

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PCMag.com is a leading authority on technology, delivering Labs-based, independent reviews of the latest products and services. Our expert industry analysis and practical solutions help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

Those who purchase a Galaxy S10 or S10+ shouldn’t have to worry about paying extra for a screen protector. Samsung this week confirmed that its upcoming flagship smartphones will come with one pre-installed.

“This decision was made to increase overall customer experiences with the improved screen durability and full functionality of the ultrasonic fingerprint sensoron Galaxy S10 and Galaxy S10+,” Samsung wrote.

If, however, the pre-installed screen protector gets scratched up and you need a new one, you’ll have to pay for it yourself. While other in-box accessories such as the Travel Adapter, USB Connector, and AKG headset are covered under a one-year warranty, the screen protector is not, Samsung said.

A Samsung-branded replacement screen protector will set you back $29.99. Samsung is urging carriers and retailers to sell its screen protectors in their stores.

The tech giant said it “cannot guarantee” that screen protectors made of traditional glass and polyurethane materials will work with the ultrasonic fingerprint sensor on Galaxy S10 and Galaxy S10+, so keep that in mind if you ever need to purchase a replacement.

The Galaxy S10 is priced from $899.99 while the larger S10+ starts at $999.999. Both are available for pre-order now and slated to arrive on March 8. PCMag’s Lead Mobile Analyst Sascha Segan got a first look at the handsets last week.

“The S10 units aren’t radically new, but as always, they’re solid,” he concluded. “The hole-punch screen is less irritating than a notch, especially on the smaller units, which have the smaller hole. The colors are attractive, and the prices are, for today’s costly mobile phone market, mainstream.”

    This article originally published at PCMag
    here

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    Bernie gets personal


    Bernie Sanders

    Sen. Bernie Sanders shakes hands during a campaign event for Christine Hallquist in Nov. 2018. Sanders’ embrace of his personal story is the latest sign that he is trying to learn from his mistakes in his first presidential bid. | Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

    2020 elections

    The 2020 hopeful is opening up about his upbringing, recognizing that his singular focus on issues wasn’t enough last time.

    When the New Yorker profiled Sen. Bernie Sanders during the 2016 presidential campaign, he sighed when he was asked about his earlier life.

    “I understand,” he said. “I really do. For people to elect a president, you’ve got to know that person — you’ve got to trust them.”

    Story Continued Below

    But, the magazine wrote, “he couldn’t resist sermonizing first,” joking, “I know those issues are not quite as important as my personal life.”

    More than three years later, Sanders’ advisers acknowledge that approach won’t cut it in 2020, and Sanders and his team are now trying to present a warmer and fuzzier version of Bernie.

    It isn’t a coincidence that Sanders is holding two kickoff rallies this weekend in Brooklyn and Chicago: He spent his childhood in a small apartment in the Flatbush neighborhood, and attended Brooklyn College for one year. The University of Chicago is where he earned his college degree, and joined the Congress of Racial Equality.

    “I grew up a few miles away from here in Brooklyn, in a three-and-a-half room rent controlled apartment. My father was a paint salesman who worked hard his entire life, but never made much money,” Sanders is expected to say Saturday, according to his prepared remarks. “Coming from a lower-middle-class family I will never forget how money — or really lack of money — was always a point of stress in our home. My mother’s dream was that someday we would move out of that rent-controlled apartment to a home of our own.”

    The embrace of his personal story is the latest sign that Sanders is trying to learn from his mistakes in his first bid and run a different kind of campaign. After facing criticism over a 2016 senior staff that some deemed too white and male, Sanders also recently announced a diverse slate of top hires and campaign co-chairs for his second bid.

    “I don’t think there will be a radical transformation of the way he presents issues to voters,” said Jeff Weaver, a top adviser and longtime friend to Sanders. “But I do think there’s a realization that when folks elect a president, they’re not just electing a stack of policy proposals.”

    The opening tour, Weaver added, is “an attempt to draw a connection between Bernie Sanders’ life story and the policy agenda that he is that he is putting forward in the campaign.”

    Sanders’ campaign has also been tweeting and issuing press releases that nod to his past, including his time in Chicago when he “helped lead student protests against segregated campus housing, segregated schools and police brutality.”

    Sanders’ allies think his personal story —he’s the son of a Polish immigrant whose family members were killed in the Holocaust, grew up lower-middle class, mourned the death of his parents at a young age, and participated in the civil rights movement — could prove powerful in a time when many immigrants feel under siege by President Donald Trump and income inequality is on the rise.

    They also think it could help him built trust with key parts of the Democratic Party’s coalition that he struggled to win over in 2016. Though a majority of young voters of color cast a ballot for him, according to an analysis of exit polls in 25 states, Sanders lost by large margins among their older counterparts.

    But the strategy comes with risks: It could draw more attention to parts of Sanders’ life that could prove damaging, such as when he said more than 30 years ago that Cuban dictator Fidel Castro “totally transformed the society.” And there’s a chance it will be viewed by some of his fans as phony.

    It also remains to be seen whether beyond this weekend Sanders will talk extensively about his biography — or whether his campaign will more often do it for him.

    Sanders’ supporters have long urged him to talk more about his background.

    This week Justice Democrats, a progressive political action committee that recruited Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), posted a video on Twitter suggesting Sanders should spotlight his biography.

    “I think voters who feel under attack by Trump deserve to hear his personal story about why Bernie believes he’s the leader for today,” Waleed Shahid, communications director for Justice Democrats and a former Sanders staffer, told POLITICO. “Bernie is selling himself a little short by only focusing on how his policies can tackle the crises of our time, and not also telling his personal story about why these fights matter to him as the child of an immigrant father whose family was killed by fascists in the Holocaust.

    “Bernie has often not talked about his personal biography because he wants it to be about the issues,” Weaver said. “But I also think there’s a realization that it’s important for people to understand your biography and how it informs and motivates those policies.”

    Weaver provided some clues about what Sanders might say Saturday and Sunday. The aide said that Brooklyn College was “virtually free” when Sanders was a student there. Free college tuition is a centerpiece of his agenda.

    “I think it signifies that this is not a new idea, but an idea that used to be prevalent in America but has since been lost,” Weaver said.

    He also said “his family’s immigrant experience was powerful in 2016,” and “growing up in a community in the very recent past that faced the worst kind of oppression, to the point of genocide, also is an important factor in understanding Bernie Sanders the person.”

    According to prepared remarks, Sanders is planning to say this weekend that he “learned a great deal about immigration as a child because my father came to this country from Poland at the age of 17, without a nickel in his pocket. He came to escape the crushing poverty that existed in his community, and to escape widespread anti-Semitism. Needless to say I would not be with you today if he had not made that trip from Poland because virtually his entire family there was wiped out by the Nazis.”

    Lawrence Moore, the South Carolina political director for Sanders’ 2016 campaign, said Sanders may be able to connect with more voters if he talks about his past.

    “I would think it would work better, as long as they don’t overdo it,” said Moore, who is now the co-chair of the state chapter of the Sanders-founded group Our Revolution. “From what I know of him, I don’t think that he will let that happen.”

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    Mike Tanier’s Combine Notebook, Day 1: Kyler Murray Speaks to the Skeptics

    0 of 8

      Darrell Henderson, a running back prospect out of the University of Memphis, sprints for a 40 time at the combine in Indianapolis.

      Darrell Henderson, a running back prospect out of the University of Memphis, sprints for a 40 time at the combine in Indianapolis.Michael Conroy/Associated Press

      Kyler Murray spoke for himself Friday: no cue cards, no dad-prodding, no awkward silences. And this edition of Combine Notebook kicks off with Murray’s continuing quest to measure up to the standards of a first-round NFL quarterback. Plus, we answer such pressing combine questions as:  

    • Is Jonah Williams a Tyrannosaurus rex?
    • Which running back prospect is most like Alvin Kamara?
    • If all the Mini McVay head coaches formed a boy band, who would be the big-brother type?
    • What are NFL head coaches really saying when they spout press-conference gibberish?
    • Which of Friday’s 40 times and measurement results should you care about?

    And much, much more!  

    1 of 8

      Alonzo Adams/Associated Press

      If someone the size of a junior varsity shooting guard tells you he plans to play in the NFL in six months, you should be skeptical.

      If that same person says he planned to play baseball in the major leagues just three months ago and then reacts like he was asked to solve a word problem when asked to clarify his decision, you should be even more skeptical.

      Kyler Murray skepticism is healthy and rational. He’s smaller than nearly every other quarterback. He switched from planning to play baseball to entering the NFL draft just weeks ago. And he handled questions about that switch very poorly.

      But “skepticism” doesn’t mean taking a negative stance and defending it like Bunker Hill. It means evaluating the evidence critically and revising your opinion when new information arrives.

      Murray’s Thursday measurements—5’10” and one-blessed-eighth of an inch, 207 pounds, a 9½-inch handspan—quieted some of his critics. Murray is shaped more like Russell Wilson than Oliver Twist. He won’t need a high chair in the huddle or snap like balsa wood upon impact.

      But Murray did much more to quell skepticism Friday afternoon when he finally got the opportunity to speak for himself.

      “It’s a final decision,” he said at the scouting combine. “I’m here. I’m ready to go.

      “I was born a football player. I love this game, and there was no turning back when I made this decision. I’m 100 percent in.”

      Murray said NFL teams aren’t questioning his commitment to football during private interviews: “For the most part, everybody’s been pretty solid knowing that I’m here to play football.”

      He addressed the scuttlebutt that his father, former college quarterback Kevin Murray, has helicopter-parented him through the football/baseball decision process.

      “As far as all that stuff everybody’s saying, that he has a part in everything that I’ve done … I don’t know where anybody got that,” Murray said. “He’s just a fan of his son, proud of me just like any other dad.”

      What Murray said was important; how he said it was even more important.

      There were dozens of reporters at his press conference. Judging by the chit-chat before his arrival, many were far more skeptical of Murray than I was. But he answered questions with confidence and good humor. It was a far cry from his awkward navel-gazing performance during Super Bowl week.

      There are still some reasons to be skeptical of Murray.

      He won’t run or throw this week. His 207-pound weight doesn’t sound like it’s performance academy-approved muscle. “Getting older, not being in school and having actual time to eat and do other things has helped me a lot,” he said.

      And one 20-minute press conference doesn’t change the fact that he’s one of the most unusual quarterback prospects in NFL history.

      But again: Skepticism is healthy, as long as it’s open-minded. And it’s hard to question Murray’s passion for football after what he did at Oklahoma last year or what he said Friday.

      “I’m always the smallest guy on the field, but I’ve said it multiple times: I feel like I’m the most impactful player on the field and the best player on the field all the time,” Murray said.

      “I always had to play at this height. Everything’s always tried to make it out to be something, but I just go out and play the game that I love.”

      And of course, we don’t have to guess about how tall Murray is, how much he weighs or how big his hands are anymore.

      “We can put all that to rest now,” Murray said. “That’s fun.”

    2 of 8

      Michael Conroy/Associated Press

      Heights, weights, 40 times and other numbers worth talking about from Friday’s weigh-ins and workouts.

      D.K. Metcalf, wide receiver, Ole Miss: 27 bench-press reps

      Not bad for an All-American defensive end. Oh yeah, forgot: Metcalf is a wide receiver. Based on social media posts, we were expecting 270 reps.

      N’Keal Harry, wide receiver, Arizona State: 27 bench-press reps

      WHAT ARE THEY FEEDING WIDE RECEIVERS THESE DAYS?

      Ed Oliver, defensive line, Houston: 6’1⅞”, 287 pounds

      Apparently, there was some question about whether Oliver was big enough to be a first-round pick. Or about whether he has a natural position or is the right size for it (he’s a 3-tech tackle, and yes). Or something, because…lots of ordinary citizens somehow have in-depth scouting opinions about defensive linemen from the American Athletic Conference now? This draft stuff is confusing.

      Darrell Henderson, running back, Memphis: 4.49-second 40, 22 bench-press reps

      Henderson said Thursday that teams were “sleeping” on his speed. “I’m projected to run a 4.6,” he said. No one I talked to projected Henderson to run a 4.6—maybe his trainer came up with that to motivate him— but the fast 40 confirms the burst Henderson shows on tape, making him a worthy Day 2 consideration.

      Justice Hill (pictured), running back, Oklahoma State: 4.40-second 40, 40-inch vertical jump

      These are important results for a 5’10”, 198-pound back. Hill’s burst is obvious on tape, and he has been super-productive for the Cowboys, but he doesn’t generate many yards after contact. If NFL teams are going to invest in a pure speed back, they want to see that the speed is truly pure.

      Ryquell Armstead, running back, Temple: 4.45-second 40 at 220 pounds

      That’s a remarkable size-speed combination for the South Jersey product. Armstead was hampered by toe injuries early in his college career but looked good at the Senior Bowl. His stock is rising.

      Garrett Bradbury, center, North Carolina State: 4.92-second 40, 34 bench-press reps

      Before these impressive results, Bradbury looked like a late first- or early second-round pick who could start in the NFL for a decade. After these impressive results, Bradbury looks like a late first- or early second-round pick who could start in the NFL for a decade.

      Iosua Opeta, offensive line, Weber State: 39 bench-press reps

      Opeta was this year’s offensive line bench-press champion. I have never heard of him or seen him. This result will make scouts double-check his film, which is what the combine is all about.

      Dexter Lawrence, defensive tackle, Clemson: 342 pounds

      He big.

    3 of 8

      Michael Wyke/Associated Press

      Who he is

      Trayveon Williams rushed for 1,760 yards and 18 touchdowns for Texas A&M last season, adding 27-278-1 as a receiver. He gained 3,615 rushing yards, scored 35 touchdowns and averaged 6.0 yards per carry in three collegiate seasons.

      Williams is a huge Alvin Kamara fan, and like Kamara, he combines elusiveness, receiving ability and surprising power in a compact frame.

      The numbers

      Williams measured 5’8⅛” and 206 pounds, ran the 40 in 4.51 seconds and recorded a 121-inch broad jump: all credible-to-very-good results for a smaller rusher.

      What he said

      On playing through the 2017 season while his family was displaced by Hurricane Harvey: “That was a difficult situation. At the time, I was trying to be a team captain and leader, but at the same time, I had to deal with the situation and devastation back home. … My area was one of the worst areas to get hit. But things happen, and I just have to keep thanking God that we came through it.”

      On combining explosiveness with the patience to wait for holes to open up: “I say it all the time: ‘Slow to it, fast through it.’ That hole can open up but then close immediately. So you have to set your blocks up, and when it’s set, you have to hit it full-speed.”

      On his relationship with Kamara: “My freshman year, we played Tennessee. We were going back-and-forth, head-to-head. I gained a lot of respect for his game, and I definitely feel like our games resemble each other. … He’s a great guy. I talk with him over Twitter and text messages.”

      Bottom line

      Williams isn’t quite as effective a receiver or pass-protector as Kamara but looks like a more effective runner between the tackles. He’s a likely Day 2 pick, and if his pass protection improves—Williams is a little more willing than able at this point—he can be a three-down NFL starter.

    4 of 8

      Joe Robbins/Getty Images

      Jonah Williams, considered by many to be the top left tackle in this year’s draft class, measured in at 6’4″ and 302 pounds with 33⅝-inch arms.

      His arms are slightly shorter than the ideal left tackle prototype (34-plus inches), leading to lots of delightful Twitter exchanges among overstimulated draft experts of both the nationally recognized and self-proclaimed varieties. To paraphrase:

      EXPERT ONE: Ooh, those arms are a little short. It could impact Williams’ value to some teams.

      EXPERT TWO: Big deal! Joe Thomas had arms of comparable length!

      EXPERT THREE: How DARE you compare Jonah Williams to Joe Thomas?

      EXPERT FOUR: Measurables are meaningless. Everything is meaningless except my opinion!

      EXPERT FIVE: Dude, Williams is totally comparable to Joe Thomas, and also Kyler Murray is Drew Brees with Michael Vick’s legs, and D.K. Metcalf is Thor.

      EXPERT SIX: Anyone who takes Jonah Williams completely off their draft board because of this is silly. Look at me! I’m crushing a straw man in an argument! Wheeeeeeee!

      And so on for about 24 hours.

      What Williams said about being a mighty T-rex with itty-bitty arms

      “It’s a small portion of what it takes to be a tackle at the next level. If you look at a lot of the really successful tackles over the past 10 years—Joe Thomas, Joe Staley, Jake Matthews, Jason Peters, La’el Collins, Ryan Ramczyk, just to name a couple off the top of my head that have shorter arms than me—I don’t think that they’re necessarily a huge deal.

      “If my fingers were an eighth of an inch longer, I might be good enough. But I think the way that I play is what defines me as a football player.”

      What the tape says

      Williams is so quick-footed, alert and physical that there is no reason to doubt that he can be an excellent NFL left tackle.

      What common sense says

      Some draft evaluators both in the NFL and the media compare all left tackles to Orlando Pace, and if the left tackle does not have Pace’s measurements, he does not fit the “prototype.” It’s silly, and Williams treated the controversy with all the seriousness it deserves with his deadpan remarks.

      But hey, this was Wednesday, and we needed something to talk about before Kyler Murray weighed in.

    5 of 8

      Associated Press

      In this week’s combine notebooks, we’ll be profiling the NFL’s new head coaches, gauging their ability to handle their teams’ toughest issues, assessing their fashion sense and, most importantly, assigning them a Sean McVay Number, which is like a Kevin Bacon Number, except it can land you one of the 32 most coveted jobs in professional sports.

      Kliff Kingsbury, Arizona Cardinals

      Sean McVay Number: 3

      Kingsbury never coached for or with McVay, but he has McVay-like characteristics (youth, innovative offensive concepts, skinny jeans) and knows McVay personally. They may have once tried to open a microbrewery together or form a jam band or something.

      Fashion sense: Elite

      Kingsbury wore a quilted black vest over a grey collar-neck T-shirt at the combine, with a stylish stubblebeard. Think Aeropostale catalog meets big-brother type in a boy band meets cosplayer at a Supernatural fanfest.

      Kingsbury also has a deep basso profundo voice, like the world’s skinniest Barry White impersonator.

      How he tackled the tough topics

      Kingsbury did his best to tamp down speculation that the Cardinals are considering Kyler Murray with the first pick in the draft, stating, “I obviously think the world of Kyler as a player and person,” but praising Josh Rosen for being “cerebral” and “playing through some adverse conditions” and stating that he will tailor his system to make the most of Rosen’s talents.

      Cardinals GM Steve Keim then said Rosen was the Cardinals quarterback “right now, for sure,” and all the speculation was tamped right back up again.

      Overall impression

      Kingsbury has the casual demeanor of someone who is either about to take the NFL by storm or has no idea what he is in for.

      Pairing Kingsbury with Murray would be such a bold experiment that it would make the Chip Kelly Eagles look like a vinegar-and-baking-soda volcano. If that’s what Keim and Kingsbury want to do, they should get started on it. All the coy, cutesy-poo messaging isn’t helping Kingsbury set a tone for the Cardinals or get started on all of the heavy lifting that must get done to improve the entire roster.

    6 of 8

      Associated Press

      In this week’s combine notebooks, we’ll be profiling the NFL’s new head coaches, gauging their ability to handle their teams’ toughest issues, assessing their fashion sense and, most importantly, assigning them a Sean McVay Number, which is like a Kevin Bacon Number, except it can land you one of the 32 most coveted jobs in professional sports.

      Brian Flores, Miami Dolphins

      Sean McVay Number: 4

      Flores has no McVay relationship or McVay-like characteristics. But his Bill Belichick Number is 1, so you know where you can cram your silly McVay comparisons.

      Fashion sense: Average

      Flores appeared at the combine wearing a “smedium”-sized aqua-and-orange Dolphins golf shirt over his muscular frame. His goatee was trimmed to a point that jutted from his face at a 135-degree angle, perfect for opening bottles or providing lethal chin-butts. The overall effect was “Aquaman sidekick character concept art.”

      How he tackled the tough topics

      Flores on the Dolphins’ possibly starting his head coaching career with a rookie quarterback: “If that’s the situation, then that’s the situation.”

      Flores on the status of Ryan Tannehill, who (per reports) is unlikely to remain with the Dolphins: “Those things are in process.”

      No one spends his career coaching under Belichick and comes away eager to give straight answers at press conferences.

      Overall impression

      Flores fielded many questions about how similar his Dolphins will be to the Patriots, or what he learned from his time with the Patriots, or how beneficial it will be to have a coaching staff full of guys he brought over from the Patriots. You get the idea.

      Meanwhile, the real issue for Flores is how he can avoid the fate of so many predecessors who left Foxborough and tried (and failed) to turn other organizations into their version of the Patriots.

      Flores projects a thoughtful, humble confidence—more like young Andy Reid or Tony Dungy than the saturnine Belichick—but he conveyed almost no information at his combine press conference, even by the meager standards of a combine press conference.

      Perhaps that’s for the best. The Dolphins have a lot of work to do, and laying low while Flores installs his system and GM Chris Grier gets serious about rebuilding their hodgepodge roster may be the best thing for them.

    7 of 8

      Darron Cummings/Associated Press

      In this week’s combine notebooks, we’ll be profiling the NFL’s new head coaches, gauging their ability to handle their teams’ toughest issues, assessing their fashion sense and, most importantly, assigning them a Sean McVay Number, which is like a Kevin Bacon Number, except it can land you one of the 32 most coveted jobs in professional sports.

      Zac Taylor, Cincinnati Bengals

      Sean McVay Number: 1

      Taylor coached directly under McVay for the Rams, allowing him to soak up McVay’s wisdom and divine munificence.

      Fashion sense: Average

      Taylor wore a blue Henley to his press conference, with the collar popped and the sleeves rolled up for business, plus the official class-valedictorian haircut. The color scheme was more “Rams” than “Bengals”— someone needs to remind Taylor that orange-and-black are his new black.

      How he tackled the tough issues

      Taylor only hired defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo late last week, and the Bengals had not yet announced their full coaching staff when he spoke to the media. But he didn’t sound too concerned:

      “There might be some long weekends, some extra time put in. It was about getting the right people. You don’t want to make that mistake and rush to hire people who a year from now you’re going to regret. I feel very confident we found the right coaching staff.”

      Dude, there are definitely going to be some long weekends.

      Overall impression

      Taylor is a “question rephraser.” That’s an effective communication tactic (it reassures the listener that his question was heard while buying time to craft a better answer), and it’s extra useful when making sense of the types of questions my colleagues and I ask.

      TYPICAL SPORTSWRITER QUESTION: Coach, talk about, in your estimation, when it comes to achieving a balance between future potential and immediate needs, how you evaluate the importance of both qualities during the draft process.

      SKILLED QUESTION REPHRASER: Do I prefer to draft for potential or need? Great question…

      Otherwise, Taylor didn’t make much of an impression. He’s McVay’s former assistant, Mike Sherman’s son-in-law and Eagles quarterbacks coach Press Taylor’s brother, but it’s hard to gauge just who Taylor himself is and what stamp he will put on the Bengals.

      For now, he’s not Marvin Lewis, which will buy him a honeymoon period from fans hungry for a fresh start.

    8 of 8

      Michael Conroy/Associated Press

      Coaches and team officials spout a lot of doubletalk and gobbledegook during combine press conferences. Luckily, Bleacher Report is here to translate all of the coachspeak and stonewalling from Wednesday and Thursday into straight answers.

      QUOTE: Ravens coach John Harbaugh on Lamar Jackson’s development as a quarterback: “We were kind of working on the fly with offense a little bit [last year]. … We’re looking forward to starting from the beginning with Lamar and seeing what we can build.”

      TRANSLATION: “We know we looked a little ridiculous running a scaled-back version of Amos Alonzo Stagg’s playbook in the playoffs.”

      QUOTE: Harbaugh on what Jackson needs to work on: “The obvious thing with Lamar is going to be consistency. It’s going to be consistency with handling the ball—there’s a lot of tricky ball-handling that he’s going to have to be adept at so the ball stays off the ground—and consistency in the passing game so he can make those tight-window throws.

      TRANSLATION: “We’re still going to run some stuff from the Amos Alonzo Stagg playbook. Also: STOP. FUMBLING.”

      QUOTE: Jets GM Mike Maccagnan on whether he would pay top dollar for a free-agent running back: “You don’t look at it just at that position, but you look at it for any player. What do you think the value of that player is, within reason? And then when you negotiate a contract, you figure out what aspects of it are areas you feel would make it a good contract for being willing to take a shot on that.”

      TRANSLATION: “If someone doesn’t tie me down in the basement like a werewolf during a full moon RIGHT NOW, Imma sign Le’Veon Bell for $75 million.”

      QUOTE: Vikings GM Rick Spielman on Kirk Cousins last season: “The contract is going to get a lot of blame, but the blame has to be spread throughout. Our season wasn’t good enough for our standards last year, but statistically if you look at what Kirk did, he threw for over 4,000 yards and 30 touchdowns, but we didn’t win enough games.”

      TRANSLATION: “As NFL general managers, we are incapable of figuring out that Cousins always produces big stats for huge wads of money and his teams never win enough games.”

      QUOTE: Giants coach Pat Shurmur on Eli Manning: “When everyone started playing better around Eli, he played better. I want him back, and he’ll be back.”

      TRANSLATION: “The goal of the New York Giants is no longer to win games but to find reasons to keep Eli Manning as happy and comfortable as possible for as long as possible.”

      QUOTE: Giants GM Dave Gettleman on Eli Manning: “The narrative around Eli for the past four or five years was really negative. And there’s an old saying: Tell a lie long enough, you’ll believe it.”

      TRANSLATION: “Seriously. This whole organization is in deep denial. The unintended irony of my statements is a hidden plea for help.”

      QUOTE: Steelers GM Kevin Colbert on his team’s various controversies: “I really don’t agree with the perception that there’s a huge drama in the Steelers locker room.”

      TRANSLATION: “The Steelers are not a haunted amusement park. They are an asylum for the people who went mad from working in the haunted amusement park.”

      QUOTE: Raiders GM Mike Mayock (pictured) on the Raiders roster: “We’ve got more needs than I can even tell you about right now.”

      TRANSLATION: “I am still transitioning from television to the front office and have not yet learned to reflexively respond to all questions by talking vaguely about ‘being early in the evaluative process.’ Rest assured that by this time next year I will be speaking like a pod person.”

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    Trump demands removal of China’s agriculture tariffs


    Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump shakes hands with China’s President Xi Jinping in November 2017. Trump had been promising to ratchet up tariffs on billions worth of Chinese imports but dropped the threat after he said talks has sufficiently progressed. | Mark Wilson/Getty ImagesThomas Peter – Pool/Getty Images

    President Donald Trump said late Friday that he has asked China to remove its tariffs on U.S. agricultural exports as the two countries work on reaching a broader trade agreement addressing Beijing‘s trade practices.

    “I have asked China to immediately remove all Tariffs on our agricultural products (including beef, pork, etc.) based on the fact that we are moving along nicely with Trade discussions,” Trump said in a series of tweets. “And I did not increase their second traunch of Tariffs to 25% on March 1st. This is very important for our great farmers – and me!“

    Story Continued Below

    Trump had been promising to ratchet up tariffs on billions worth of Chinese imports on March 1, but dropped the threat in a tweet on Sunday after he said talks has sufficiently progressed.

    He said that a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping could happen later this month to finalize a deal to address U.S. allegations that Chinese industrial policies force U.S. companies to transfer technology to do business there. The administration and companies have also accused China of steal intellectual property.

    Access to one of the top export markets for U.S. farm goods has been a key aspect of the negotiations. China‘s retaliation against U.S. tariffs has hit American farmers of soybeans and other commodities.

    The USDA’s most recent forecast shows that the trade standoff between the two countries has severely hurt U.S. farm exports to China. Sales of U.S. soybeans and other farm commodities to China fell to $16.3 billion in fiscal 2018, from over $20 billion in fiscal 2017. They are forecast to decline even further — to $9 billion in the current fiscal year.

    China has imposed countertariffs on almost all of the goods that the U.S. exports there. Trump‘s tweet doesn’t specify if his demand is that China lift just its retaliatory tariffs or all tariffs on U.S. farm products.

    As part of a deal, China has pledged to increase its purchases of U.S. soybeans and has made good-faith purchases amounting to millions of metric tons of the crop. But in spite of the resumption of buying, China has not formally announced whether it would remove its retaliatory tariffs on U.S. soybeans.

    China has long been accused of putting up barriers to certain agricultural imports like beef and poultry. The administration also says China needs to fix long-standing market access problems that U.S. grains and meat have. It is pressing China to address non-tariff barriers that have made it more difficult to get genetically modified crops and U.S.-produced beef approved for export.

    “I think farmers in this country understand that China has been a great, and will continue to be a great market for U.S. soybeans, but if we’re going to take this thing to the next level, we’ve got to figure out a way to open China to all of these other commodities and that’s exactly what we’re trying to do,” Gregg Doud, chief agricultural negotiator at the U.S. Trade Representative’s office, said last month during USDA’s annual outlook forum.

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    Front and Center: Garrett Bradbury, Erik McCoy Among Combine’s Top Performers

    NC State offensive lineman Garrett Bradbury runs the 40-yard dash at the NFL football scouting combine in Indianapolis, Friday, March 1, 2019. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

    Michael Conroy/Associated Press

    Centers tend to be an afterthought during the draft process even though history shows the NFL holds the position in high regard if the right talent is available. Teams have drafted some of the game’s best pivots in the first round. 

    The Atlanta Falcons’ Alex Mack, Pittsburgh Steelers’ Maurkice Pouncey, Los Angeles Chargers’ Mike Pouncey, Dallas Cowboys’ Travis Frederick and Indianapolis Colts’ Ryan Kelly all heard their names called during the opening frame. A year ago, two collegiate centers, Frank Ragnow and Billy Price, were off the board before the end of the first day. 

    When a top prospect can be found, teams don’t hesitate to invest in the position. 

    The 2019 class has the potential to feature multiple first-round centers, starting with Friday’s standouts at the NFL Scouting Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. North Carolina State’s Garrett Bradbury and Texas A&M’s Erik McCoy put their movement skills on display to wow scouts and onlookers. They’re just the tip of the potential found at the position. 

    The scheme versatility within the group is excellent, but Bradbury quickly established himself as the headliner with an exceptional workout. 

    Prior to the combine, Bradbury displayed certain traits that could lead one to believe he is a scheme-specific talent. 

    Generally speaking, two kinds of linemen can be found. The first fits a gap-blocking (or man-blocking) scheme. Those systems require powerful blockers at the point of attack to uproot and move defenders off the spot. The other fits a zone-blocking scheme in which lateral agility and athleticism are necessary to make certain blocks while on the move. All teams utilize both approaches, but the type of linemen they prefer is based on which one they employ most often. 

    Bradbury is a prototypical zone-blocking center based on his ability to reach defenders, make blocks at the second level and identify targets in space. NFL Network’s Ben Fennell provided examples of Bradbury’s outstanding lateral footwork and his ability to reach and hook defenders: 

    Ben Fennell @BenFennell_NFL

    Enjoy some NC State Garrett Bradbury reach blocks here.

    Man if you’re late off the ball as a DL – you’re done vs Bradbury! Light feet and loose hips…

    #OLPorn #2019NFLDraft https://t.co/1d53mgWcts

    Everyone got to see how those movement skills translated during his combine workout. 

    First, the 6’3″, 306-pound Bradbury ran an unofficial 4.92-second 40-yard dash, which ranked third among offensive linemen. The high school tight end also finished top-five among his position group in the three-cone drill (7.41 seconds) and short shuttle (4.53 second). These further highlight his lower-body fluidity, as seen below courtesy of Catch Scratch Reader’s Billy Marshall: 

    Billy Marshall @BillyM_91

    Bradbury shuffling and mirroring. So smooth https://t.co/Y4yZwsrvnv

    There were questions about how well Bradbury could handle bigger, more physical NFL-caliber defensive linemen. His 34 reps of 225 pounds on the bench presswhich ranked second overallindicate a powerful blocker. His tape certainly shows someone who loves to finish blocks. 

    “I think it says he’s freakishly athletic for his size,” former Wolfpack quarterback Ryan Finley said of his center during January’s Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama, per The Athletic’s Joseph Person. “He’s competitive. He’s kind of a team-first guy, and he’s got a really good build.”

    Right now, the Carolina Panthers and Minnesota Vikings are potential first-round fits. The Panthers’ Ryan Kalil plans to retire, and Bradbury can provide a similar skill set. If the reigning Rimington Trophy winner lasts until the 18th overall pick, he’s an ideal option for the Minnesota Vikings, who are implementing a Gary Kubiak-influenced scheme. This means it’ll feature heavy zone-blocking principles. 

    Usually, organizations salivate over the potential top tackle or even guard prospects. Tackles hold a higher positional value. Colts All-Pro Quenton Nelson showed a guard could be a top-10 pick last year. Yet, this year’s center class doesn’t stop with Bradbury. 

    Texas A&M center Erik McCoy at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis.

    Texas A&M center Erik McCoy at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis.Michael Conroy/Associated Press/Associated Press

    McCoy was an early entrant to the 2019 draft class. So, his status took a little time to build momentum. The redshirt junior was allowed to participate in the Senior Bowl since he already graduated, and he performed well. If his all-star performance didn’t warrant enough attention, the 6’4″, 303-pound center blazed a linemen-leading 4.89-second 40-yard dash.

    A lineman will be the first to say running 40 yards in a straight line isn’t realistic in relation to what’s asked of him in a game situation. However, the overall athleticism and quickness needed to pull, get out in space and make a block do reflect those movement skills, as Senior Bowl executive director Jim Nagy noted:  

    Jim Nagy @JimNagy_SB

    Best OL 40 time at #Combine was posted by @AggieFootball center @Erik_McCoy_73. Here is how 4.90 translates onto the field. 👇 https://t.co/hXBle2MSfz

    Furthermore, the on-field portions of McCoy’s workout rivaled anyone else’s best. He moved effortlessly throughout the drills and showed good balance and technique. 

    “I’ll say it a hundred times: Erik’s the best center there is,” former A&M offensive lineman Keaton Sutherland told the Dallas Morning NewsBen Baby. “He’s the smartest that there is. To have him playing next to you makes your life a lot easier because he’s making the calls, he’s letting you know what to do and helping you out.”

    The Kansas City Chiefs and Los Angeles Rams are potential landing spots for McCoy in the back end of the first round. The Chiefs’ starting center, Mitch Morse, will be a free agent when the new league year beings March 13, while the Rams’ John Sullivan turns 34 years old before the start of the regular season. L.A. can save $5.25 million by releasing him. 

    Or, McCoy could land with his old offensive line coach if he slips into the second round. Jim Turner left the Aggies program to join the Cincinnati Bengals staff under new head coach Zac Taylor. 

    Bradbury and McCoy alone help make an impressive center class since the position isn’t as deep in the NFL (only two centers are needed on each of the 32 teams). More quality options are available. 

    Mississippi State center Elgton Jenkins at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis.

    Mississippi State center Elgton Jenkins at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis.Michael Conroy/Associated Press/Associated Press/Associated Press

    Mississippi State’s Elgton Jenkins is a road-grader. The 6’4″, 310-pound lineman is powerful at the point of attack and an ideal fit in a gap scheme. Once Jenkins latches onto defenders, he’s overwhelming. He didn’t participate in the 40-yard dash, but he provided plenty of pop during position-specific drills. 

    Three versatile options exist beyond the top three prospects. 

    Kansas State’s Dalton Risner started 13 games in the middle as a redshirt freshman before converting to right tackle. Wisconsin’s Michael Deiter also played multiple positions, including 16 games at center. Even Alabama’s Jonah Williams, whom most project to tackle or guard, has some teams interested in him as an interior blocker.

    Aside from the Panthers, Vikings, Chiefs, Rams and Bengals, three more teamsthe Buffalo Bills, Denver Broncos and New York Jetsrequire center help. The demand may be high, but this is the best class in recent memory. 

    Brent Sobleski covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter, @brentsobleski.

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