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How strong does the WFT depth chart look now that the draft is finished?

Washington Football Report

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Jamin Davis, LB, 2021 Kentucky Football Pro DayPhoto by Jacob Noger | UK Football(UK Athletics)

Washington entered the draft with eight draft picks, but via a late trade with the Eagles, changed a 2022 5th-round pick into two late picks in this year’s draft — a 6th and a 7th — giving Washington 4 picks in the final two rounds and ten picks overall for the 2021 draft. With the ten picks, the Washington roster is at the 90-man maximum that the team is allowed to bring to training camp in July. At this point, to sign a new player, the front office will have to make room by removing a current player from the roster.

It seems likely that there will be some UDFA signings this week that will affect the depth chart — in fact, there’s already been an early report that RB Jaret Patterson has signed with the Football Team — but with a 90-man roster, each signing will need to be paired with a corresponding move to remove a current player, so I don’t expect a lot of signings. Last year, you may recall, the front office signed only 4 UDFAs post-draft to fill out the slimmed-down 80-man offseason roster. I think the number may be similar this year.

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Bill Horgan

Washington seems to have added young talent where it was needed:

Linebacker - the first pick of the draft adds a LB, Jamin Davis, who seems to fit naturally into the WILL role as a Day 1 starter, with the ability to develop into a key defensive leader as his career develops. Ron Rivera said afterwards that he has never felt more comfortable with a player, or words to that effect. He obviously feels very good about the team’s first round selection.

Offensive Line - in the second round, the team selected Sam Cosmi, who many regard as the most athletic lineman in the draft class.

Defensive backs - At first I thought the team might rely on St-Juste, their initial 3rd round pick, to bolster both CB and FS, but with the 5th round pick the team added a true safety in Darrick Forrest with the flexibility to play both strong & free safety, continuing the pattern of versatility that Ron Rivera seems to value in players.

Wide Receiver - Dyami Brown looks like a player who may have been under-valued by teams due to his limited role in the UNC offense, but he is only the second D1 player ever to average 20 yards per catch in consecutive years. He should add an explosive element to the offense that can be exploited by Ryan Fitzpatrick, and which should open up the field for the other receiving targets in a way that we haven’t seen since the days when Desean Jackson wore burgundy & gold. The team added another 1,000-yard receiver in Dax Milne with its final pick in the draft.

Tight End - More than a few fans expected the team to grab a tight end earlier in the draft, but they grabbed a strong blocker and reliable receiver (albeit with limited college production in the passing game) when they took John Bates in the 4th round. I have listed Bates as the primary backup to Logan Thomas on the depth chart above. Ignore the TV analyst’s player comp of Jeremy Sprinkle for this guy — we don’t want to worsen your PTSD. Bates looks to be a better blocker and a much smoother pass catcher that “Sprink” ever was.

Defensive End - With Montez Sweat and Chase Young locked in as starters, the Football Team needed to build some depth behind them following the apparent loss of both Ryan Anderson and Ryan Kerrigan in free agency. They did that with a pair of back-to-back 7th round selections — William Bradley-King, drafted at #240, and Shaka Toney at #246.

Long Snapper — I took a fair bit of good-natured ribbing for my spotlight article on the long-snapper position and my suggestion that the Football Team might draft Cameron Cheeseman this weekend. I’m not gonna say “I told you so” because I don’t want to spend the rest of my life hearing about how I championed Thaddeus Moss as the answer to the team’s backup tight end role earlier this offseason. I’m gonna assume that being right on one and wrong on the other cancel each other out and restore me to a clean slate.

Running back - This is the one position that looked thin that wasn’t addressed in the draft. After releasing Bryce Love, Javon Leake and Michael Warren in the past few weeks, it was clear that the team needed to add one or two backs for training camp. As mentioned earlier in the article, there has been a report that Buffalo’s Jaret Petterson will be signed this week. This always looked like fertile ground for a UDFA since the team returns all three of its top running backs from last season along with veteran Lamar Miller.

Quarterback - Comments from Ron Rivera and Martin Mayhew indicate that the team might’ve drafted a quarterback if the right guy was there at the right pick, but that they didn’t plan to chase one by trading up. As it turned out, they didn’t address the position, and it looks like the team will go to camp with Fitzpatrick, Heinicke, Allen and Montez, which should be fine for the 2021 season. A decision looms, however, as the team will need a long-term solution sooner rather than later.

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