Reviewing USMNT Player Pool in Europe 2020-2021 Part 3

Welcome back! For more of an intro and context, check back in Part 1. And check back at Part 2 to see the USMNT prospects in Europe. Again, I will be looking at each players’ minutes, games played, assists, and goals (mostly all available at https://fbref.com/en/ with some help from https://www.transfermarkt.us/). I didn’t include stats for youth players or if I couldn’t find them. Here in Part 3, we will mostly examine the fringe of the USMNT player pool in Europe. Come back for Part 4 where we talk about the top USMNTers in Europe.

Reminders: I narrowed my focus to just players in Europe. Sorry Johnny Cardoso fans. Also if you don’t see a name in their expected section, keep scrolling, as there are some special sections throughout, or go back and check Part 1 (that’s where the undeclared dual-nationals are).

These tiers are *supposed* to be in order from worst-to-best but I’ll admit I got a little lost in the sauce. Also, who’s to say whether its better to be in the English Championship or Greek League? I sure as heck don’t know. Within each section I listed the players in order from most-to-least interesting. Overall this is kind of a “who is the best player in a vacuum” ranking while also being a “who had the best season” ranking. So, like, don’t take it too seriously? I don’t know I just do this for fun.

Player Name, Age (Club/League; Total appearances, total mins, goals, assists)

** – Has appeared for USMNT under Gregg Berhalter

2nd Division Heroes (2nd Divisions of France, England, Spain, Italy, and Germany)

  • Julian Green, 25 (Greuther Furth; 33 apps, 2488 mins, 10 goals, 3 asissts)
  • Nicolas Gioachinni**, 20 (Caen; 32 apps, 2133 mins, 5 goals, 1 assist)
  • Cameron Carter-Vickers**, 22 (Bournmouth, loaned from Tottenham; 24 apps, 2115 mins, 1 goal)
  • Andrija Novakovich, 24 (Frosinone; 34 apps, 2226 mins, 11 goals, 5 assists)
  • Shaq Moore, 24 (Tenerife; 41 apps, 3340 mins, 2 assists)
  • Matt Olosunde, 23 (Rotherham; 33 apps, 2037 mins, 1 goal, 3 assists)
  • Duane Octavius Holmes**, 26 (Huddersfield Town; 19 apps, 1235 mins, 2 goals, 2 assists)
  • Timothy Tillman, 21 (Gruether Furth; 27 apps, 715 mins, 3 assists)
  • Charlie Kelman, 19 (Queens Park Rangers; 12 apps, 202 mins)
  • McKinze Gaines, 22 (Hannover 96; 1 apps, 6 mins)
  • Giuseppe Barone, 22 (Salernitana; 0 app, 0 mins…?)
  • Daniel Osuji, 19 (Alcorcon; couldn’t find stats)

These guys are all playing about as well as they can given that they play for a second division team. All of the young guys here should continue to prove themselves for the rest of the season and hope for a transfer upwards in the future. Green led Furth to a promotion to the Bundesliga. He was arguably one of their best players this season. Gioachinni is getting lots of minutes but not showing tons of end product. Novakovich and Moore got plenty of minutes and might warrant moves to better clubs? I’ll admit I didn’t watch any film of either of them this season. Fun fact: Shaq Moore played the most minutes of any American *field player* in Europe this season. CCV steadied Bournemouth’s backline and lost in the promotional playoffs. Rumors are Bournemouth want to make his loan permanent, but they will have to fight off other suitors. Holmes saw an uptick in form after moving to Huddersfield in January. There are apparently more Americans at Alcorcon with Osuji, but I have not been able to confirm that off of Twitter so I only included Osuji here.

Middling Leagues (Ranked 11-20 by UEFA; Turkey, Scotland, Denmark, Cyprus, Greece, Serbia, et al.)

  • Jordan Pefok “Siebatcheu”**, 24 (Young Boys; 43 apps, 1748 mins, 15 goals, 4 assists)
  • DeAndre Yedlin**, 27 (Galatasary; 11 apps, 668 mins)
  • Haji Wright, 22 (Sonderjyske; 37 apps, 2328 mins, 13 goals, 2 assists)
  • Emmanuel Sabbi, 22 (Odense; 32 apps, 1916 mins, 6 goals, 4 assists)
  • Christian Cappis, 21 (Hobro; 27 apps, 2172 mins, 2 asissts)
  • Tyler Boyd**, 25 (Sivasspor, loaned from Besiktas; 14 apps, 726 mins, 5 goals)
  • Mix Diskerud, 30 (Denizlispor; 18 apps, 1125 mins)
  • Gbohly Ariyibi, 26 (Panetolikos; 29 apps, 1873 mins, 4 goals, 2 assists)
  • Ian Harkes, 25 (Dundee United; 35 apps, 2659 mins)
  • Dillon Powers, 29 (Dundee United; 14 apps, 581 mins)
  • Danilo Radjen, 26 (DFK Backa; 21 apps, 1537 mins)
  • Mukwelle Akale, 24 (Pafos FC; 6 apps, 177 mins)

To continue my MLS comparisons, I think most of these leagues are slightly worse than MLS, minus some top teams in each league. Like Celtic and Rangers probably have more talent than MLS teams, but the rest of the Scottish Premiere League probably has less. Same could be said of the top Swiss teams, Turkish teams, etc. Pefok, the Hero against Honduras, played a significant role for Young Boys in winning the Swiss title and making a Europa League run. Yedlin got a much needed move to Galatasary in January. The Danish contingent of Wright, Sabbi, and Cappis all got plenty of minutes. I wouldn’t hate seeing any of them get called up for a USMNT friendly at some point. Hey remember Mix Diskerud? He moved to Turkey in January and he’s doing alright for himself. Can we talk about how Gbohly Ariyibi had a solid season in Greece and very few people noticed? I watched one game of Harkes in Scotland and there is a reason I did not watch a second one. Anyone know why the UEFA rankings have the Cyprus league this high? Seems a little out of place if you ask me.

Declining Veterans (Used to regularly play in Top 5 Leagues at some point)

  • Tim Ream**, 33 (Fulham; 10 apps, 930 mins)
  • Timmy Chandler, 30 (Frankfurt; 17 apps, 463 mins)
  • Eric Lichaj, 32 (Faith Karagumruk; 10 apps, 736 mins)

In some ways I think this is the most controversial section. This list used to have Cameron, Morales, and Diskerud but they all found new homes this season. Chandler should probably follow their suit a leave Frankfurt for more playing time. Ream and Lichaj may want to follow Cameron’s example and jump ship to MLS. But Ream recently signed a new deal with Fulham to stay with the club despite their relegation. The fact that Fulham re-signed Ream tells me he is still in their plans for now. But Father Time is undefeated, and it is unlikely Ream will get any better going forward. He is a St. Louis native, so perhaps he is holding out one more year until St. Louis enter MLS.

MLS-to-Europe Pipeline

  • Darryl Dike**, 20 (Barnsley, loaned from Orlando City; 20 apps, 1323 mins, 9 goals)
  • Brenden Aaronson**, 20 (RB Salzburg; 25 apps, 1654 mins, 7 goals, 5 assists)
  • Mark McKenzie**, 21 (Genk; 16 apps, 899 mins)
  • Bryan Reynolds**, 19 (AS Roma; 5 apps 283 mins)
  • Brandon Servania**, 21 (St. Polten, loaned from FC Dallas; 10 apps 641 mins)
  • Justin Che, 17 (Bayern Munich II, loaned from FC Dallas)
  • Joe Scally, 18 (Borussia Mönchengladbach U19)
  • Andrew Wooten, 31 (Admira Wacker; 19 apps, 1348 mins, 3 goals, 2 assists)

These are all of the Americans who jumped across the pond from MLS during the January transfer window. Dike is the guy everyone is talking about, partially because he scored some bangers, and partially because it’s relatively easy for Americans to watch the English Championship. Aaronson has adopted the Red Bull Way well under Marsch, and there are rumors he might follow Marsch to Leipzig. McKenzie needed to adjust a little more to Genk. I am hoping he is a regular starter for them next year. Reynolds just got his feet wet with Roma. We’ll see how much he is in Jose Mourinho’s plans next season. Brandon Servania quietly got loaned to an Austrian team that has a relationship with Bayern Munich. I always thought most people underrated Servania and I hope he gets more chances in Europe. Justin Che has made some noise. @scuffed is on the record saying that Che looks better for Bayern II than Richards did and Che is younger than Richards was at the time Richards was on Bayern II. Scally was bought for a lot of money to not even make a cameo for Gladbach’s first team. Hopefully that changes next season.

Thanks for reading! Come back for Part 4 tomorrow. Have any questions or qualms with how I organized this? Then leave a comment below or yell at me on Twitter, @Beardedjack

Reviewing USMNT Player Pool in Europe 2020-2021 Part 2

Welcome back! For more of an intro and context, check back in Part 1. Again, I will be looking at each players’ minutes, games played, assists, and goals (mostly all available at https://fbref.com/en/ with some help from https://www.transfermarkt.us/). I didn’t include stats for youth players or if I couldn’t find them. Here in Part 2, we will mostly examine the prospects of the USMNT player pool in Europe. Come back for Part 3 to read about the fringe of the USMNT player pool, and Part 4 where we talk about the top USMNTers in Europe.

Reminders: I narrowed my focus to just players in Europe. Sorry Johnny Cardoso fans. Also if you don’t see a name in their expected section, keep scrolling, as there are some special sections throughout, or go back and check Part 1 (that’s where the undeclared dual-nationals are).

These tiers are *supposed* to be in order from worst-to-best but I’ll admit I got a little lost in the sauce. Also, who’s to say whether its better to play for Benfica B vs. Frankfurt’s U19s? I sure as heck don’t know. Within each section I listed the players in order from most-to-least interesting. Overall this is kind of a “who is the best player in a vacuum” ranking while also being a “who had the best season” ranking. So, like, don’t take it too seriously? I don’t know I just do this for fun.

Extra Disclaimer for this part: It is really difficult to get reliable stats of any youth games anywhere, so I did not bother including them here. I simply named where the player is playing.

Player Name, Age (Club/League; Total appearances, total mins, goals, assists)

** – Has appeared for USMNT under Gregg Berhalter

U19, U18, U17, and U16 Teams

  • Kobe Hernandez-Foster,18 (Wolfsburg U19)
  • Federico Oliva, 16 (Athletico Madrid U19)
  • Mason Judge, 19 (Frankfurt U19)
  • Maximilian Dietz, 19 (Freiburg U19)
  • Michael Wentzel, 19 (Borussia Mönchengladbach U19)
  • Pablo Soares, 19 (Borussia Mönchengladbach U19)
  • Nico Carrera, 19 (Holstein Kiel U19)
  • Niklas Dossmann, 18 (FSV Mainz U19)
  • Bobby Piere, 18 (Strasbourg U19)
  • Nicholas Cyrus, 19 Midtjyland U19)
  • Patrick Leal, 18 (Sporting CP U19)
  • Devan Tanton, 17 (Fulham U18)
  • Alex Borto, 17 ( Fulham U18)
  • Zack Booth, 17 (Leicester City U18)
  • Carver Miller, 17 (Arminia Bielefeld U17)
  • Evan Rotundo, 16 (Schalke U17)
  • Lucas Tamarez, 16 (Hoffenheim U17)
  • Aethan Yohannes, 17 (AZ Alkmaar U17)
  • Rokas Pukstas, 17 (HNK Hajduk Split U17)
  • Grayson Dettoni, 15 (Bayern Munich U16)
  • Robert Deziel, 15 (Celta Vigo Youth)

Even though this list feels pretty comprehensive, I likely still missed some players. Guys like Joe Scally, and Justin Che are in a special category later. Kobe Hernandez-Foster showed well on the US U17 team in 2019. I have never seen Federico Oliva play, but he’s playing up an age group for Atletico Madrid which says something. Plus, he was recently training with Atleti’s first team, according to some social media sleuths. For reference: in the fall of 2019 Gio Reyna would have been on this list. In the spring of 2017 Weston McKennie would have been on this list. Obviously not all of them will pan out, but could one or two of them be the next Reyna or McKennie? With a list this long, and only getting longer, the odds look good. Lastly, yes Zack Booth is the younger brother to Taylor Booth who shows up later.

B-Team, II Team, Jong Team, or U23 Team

  • Bryang Kayo, 18 (Wolfsburg II)
  • Chituru Odunze, 18 (Leicester City U23)
  • Alex Mendez, 20 (Jong Ajax)
  • Stuart Ritchie, 19 (Hannover II)
  • Quincy Butler, 19 (Hoffenheim II)
  • Aaron Cervantes, 19 (Rangers II)
  • CJ Dos Santos, 20 (Benfica B)
  • Johan Gomez, 19 (Porto B)
  • Ethan Wady, 19 (Chelsea U23)
  • Andrew Andrade, 18 (Portimonense U23)
  • Matteo Ritaccio, 19 (Liverpool U23)
  • Augustus McGiff,18 (Reading U23)
  • Jonathan Tomkinson,19 (Norwich City U23)
  • Kyle Scott, 23 (Newcastle United U23)

Despite the different names, all of these teams serve the same purpose: a launching platform from which academy players join the first team. Again, I may have missed some players. Kayo and Odunze have been called into a few USMNT senior camps but have yet to make an appearance. Odunze, Las, Wady, and Dos Santos are all goalkeepers, and may take longer to breakthrough than the rest. Mendez looked great for the US U-20’s in 2018 and 2019, but physicality was always his biggest issue. Considering he hasn’t made waves at Jong Ajax, I would assume he wasn’t able to handle the physicality of playing with grown men. But hey, even though 20 is old for this group, it’s still relatively young. Anyone 20 or older in this group probably wants a move soon to get professional minutes. There were rumors Kyle Scott could come to MLS recently. Think about it though: in the spring of 2019 Sergino Dest would have been on this list. Alternatively, in the spring of 2017 Antonee Robinson would have been on this list. Anything can happen!

Speculative Dual Nationals (Various League)

  • Folarin Balogun, 19 (Arsenal; 6 apps, 82 mins)
  • Kik Piere, 20 (Twente; 24 apps, 2110 mins)
  • Alex Mighten, 18 (Nottingham Forrest; 27 apps, 1276 mins, 3 goals, 1 assist)
  • Bryan Okoh, 17 (FC Liefering; 15 apps, 1223 mins, 1 goal, 1 assist)
  • Kristoffer Lund, 18 (Midtjyland U19)
  • Kevin Bright, 18 (Milan U18)
  • Kaile Auvray, 16 (Lille Youth)
  • Malick Sanogo, 16 (Union Berlin U17)
  • Hassan Ayari, 19 (Sheffield United U18)
  • Malik Tillman, 18 (Bayern Munich II)
  • Lennard Maloney, 21 (Borussia Dortmund U23)
  • Patrick Koffi, 19, (Paris FC; 2 apps, 62 mins)
  • Jann George, 28 (Jahn Regensburg; 28 apps, 1488 mins, 6 goals, 3 assists)
  • Scott Pittman, 28 (Livingston; 38 apps, 3321 mins, 7 goals, 2 assists)

These players have never represented the US at any level but are eligible to switch to the USMNT if they so choose. The talent level here varies widely, and there’s a chance none of these players play for the US, hence why they are with the “prospects”. The older players here are unlikely to ever play for the USMNT even if they made that switch. Kik Piere was supposedly contacted by the USMNT last fall, according to the Athletic. Just to round it out: in the summer of 2020 Yunus Musah would have been on this list. Speaking of Musah, Folarin Balogun and he are buddies, so, there’s a chance Musah helps persuade Balogun to play for the US. Balogun is the biggest name here by far. For the record, I had Siebatcheu on this list earlier this season. Goes to show that these players could switch at any time, and the current USMNT regime seems to be targeting dual nationals like never before.

Thanks for reading! Come back for tomorrow for Part 3 and Friday for Part 4. Have any questions or qualms with how I organized this? Then leave a comment below or yell at me on Twitter, @Beardedjack

Reviewing USMNT Player Pool in Europe 2020-2021 Part 1

Welcome back! I wrote a similar pair of articles like this past December looking back at Fall 2020. Check there for the premise. Now we will examine the entire 2020-2021 season. For the most part, this series is more about breadth than depth of information. I will be looking at each players’ minutes, games played, assists, and goals (mostly all available at https://fbref.com/en/ with some help from https://www.transfermarkt.us/). I didn’t include stats for youth players or if I couldn’t find them. I definitely went overboard and tried to make this way more comprehensive than it needs to be. Here in Part 1, we will mostly examine the bottom of the US player pool in Europe. Come back for Part 2 where I look at the prospects, Part 3 to read about the fringe of the player pool, and Part 4 where we talk about the top USMNTers in Europe.

New rules: I expanded this article to include Americans playing in European 3rd divisions or lower, Americans playing in European youth systems, and some potential dual nationals who have yet to officially switch to the USMNT. On the other hand, I narrowed my focus to just players in Europe. Sorry Johnny Cardoso fans. Also if you don’t see a name in their expected section, keep scrolling, as there are some special sections throughout.

These tiers are *supposed* to be in order from worst-to-best but I’ll admit I got a little lost in the sauce. Also, who’s to say whether its better to be in the English 4th division or the Premiere League 2? I sure as heck don’t know. Within each section I listed the players in order from most-to-least interesting. Overall this is kind of a “who is the best player in a vacuum” ranking while also being a “who had the best season” ranking. So, like, don’t take it too seriously? I don’t know I just do this for fun.

Player Name, Age (Club/League; Total appearances, total mins, goals, assists)

** – Has appeared for USMNT under Gregg Berhalter

The Land of Misfit Toys

  • Jordan Morris**, 26 (Swansea City, loaned from Seattle Sounders; Tore his ACL)
  • Paul Arriola**, 26 (Swansea City, loaned from DC United; returned early due to injury)
  • Jonathan Amon**, 22 (Nordsjaelland; injured for a vast majority of the season)
  • Richard Ledezma**, 20 (PSV; tore his ACL)
  • Sebastien Soto**, 20 (Norwich City U23; joined US U23’s for Olympic Qualifying)
  • Ulysses Llanez Jr.**, 20 (Heerenveen, loaned from Wolfsburg; injured before Olympic Qualifying)
  • Nick Taitague, 22 (Became Free Agent in January, retired later in the spring)
  • Joshua Pynadath, 19 (Free Agent)

These players were either without a team, injured, or simply did not play in the spring of 2021. Taitague was released by Schalke after a few injury plagued seasons and then decided to retire from the sport. Richie Ledezma looked great in the fall before he tore his ACL in December. Jordan Morris and Paul Arriola had their loan spells cut short by injury. Joshua Pyndath was last with Jong Ajax at the end of the spring 2020. From what I can find, he has yet to sign for a new club. Llanez and Soto left to play in Olympic qualifying for a large chunk of the spring. Llanez was injured before qualifying started. They were also both on loan for parts of the year, Soto in the Dutch 2nd division and Llanez in the Dutch first division. Soto will likely be loaned again next season since Norwich were promotoed. There are rumors Llanez might reunited with Tab Ramos, his former US U-20 coach, in Houston with the Dynamo.

Smaller Leagues (Ranked 20+ by UEFA; Israel, Poland, Norway, Ireland, Sweden, and Hungary).

  • Aron Johansson, 30 (Lech Poznan; 9 apps, 519 mins, 2 goals)
  • Kenny Saief, 27 (Lechia Gdnask; 23 apps, 1430 mins, 1 assist)
  • Josh Cohen, 28 (Maccabi Haifa: 40 apps, 3600 mins, 16 Clean Sheets)
  • Ben Lederman, 21 (RKS Rakow; 13 apps, 484 mins)
  • Nebiyou Perry, 21 (Ostersunds FC; 6 apps, 340 mins)
  • Romain Gall, 26 (Orebro; 5 apps, 266 mins)
  • Henry Wingo, 25 (Ferencvaros; 12 apps, 608 mins)
  • Eduvie Ikoba, 23 (AS Trencin; 25 apps, 1123 mins, 4 goals)
  • George Fochive, 29 (Bnei Yehuda; 24 apps, 1752 mins)
  • Will Seymore, 29 (Finn Harps; 11 apps, 898 mins)
  • Jacob Bushue, 29 (FC Haka; 1 app, 90 mins)
  • Tim Murray, 33 (FC Honka; 4 apps, 360 mins)

Note some of these leagues (Ireland, Norway, Sweden) have a summer schedule, and just started playing. These leagues are ranked outside of the top 20 leagues in Europe by UEFA. These guys would be better off playing in MLS. Some of them even tried to play in MLS and did not make a large impact (see: Gall, Saief, and Wingo). Plus, none of these guys are particularly young, otherwise I might have placed this section higher on the list. With all that said, Wingo won the Hungarian league with Ferencvaros. Johansson decided to move to the Polish league in January rather than going to MLS, where there was rumored interest. Saief is @away_goals favorite niche player. Interestingly, former USL goalkeeper Josh Cohen was voted Player of the Season in the Israeli league (no not GK of the season, *Player* of the season). He won the Israeli Premiere League with Maccabi Haifa. Fun Fact: Cohen also played the most minutes of any American in Europe this season. Otherwise, this group is barely worth discussion, and we have bigger fish to fry, so, we are moving on!

3rd and 4th Divisions + Obscure 2nd Divisions (England, Spain, Germany, Belgium, Turkey, and Switzerland)

  • Indiana Vassilev, 19 (Cheltenham, loaned from Aston Villa; 12 apps, 218 mins)
  • Justin Butler, 19 (Ingolstadt; 15 apps, 398 apps)
  • Jalen Hawkins, 19 (Ingolstadt; 6 apps, 75 mins)
  • Noah Jones, 19 (FC Will 1900; 23 apps, 799 mins)
  • Arda Bulut, 21 (Karacabey, loaned from Kasimpasa; 17 app, 749 mins, 4 goals, 2 assists)
  • Marlon Fossey, 22 (Shrewsbury Town, loaned from Fulham; 8 apps, 523 mins)
  • Kevin Lankford, 22 (SV Wehen Wiesbaden, loaned from FC St. Pauli; 16 apps, 977 mins, 2 goals, 2 assists)
  • Isiah Young, 22, (Rot-Weiss Essen; 3 apps, 204 mins)
  • Lynden Gooch, 25 (Sunderland; 39 apps, 2398 mins, 4 goals 9 assists)
  • Maki Tall, 25 (Francs Borains; 0 mins)
  • Mael Corboz, 26 (SC Verl; 20 apps, 1463 mins, 2 goals, 3 assists)
  • Ryan Malone, 28 (Lubeck; 23 apps, 1686 mins, 2 goals)
  • Terrence Boyd, 29 (Hallescher; 35 apps, 3042 mins, 18 goals, 5 assists)

The teenagers here have potential to make a name for themselves one day, but they need to rise up the ranks quickly. Vassilev is probably the most recognizable name as he received cameo appearances for Aston Villa in the Premiere League last year. Butler and Hawkins’ Ingolstadt were promoted to the 2. Bundesliga at the end of this season, which will be a great place to get minutes at their age. Marlon Fossey was loaned down from Fulham and it seems like he scuffed his chance. He was originally loaned down to an English 3rd division team and in January they switched his loan to a 4th division team … not great. Gooch and Boyd have made cameos for the USMNT in the past, but at this point they are no longer relevant.

Players Returning to MLS/USL

  • Alfredo Morales**, 30 (Dusseldorf -> NYCFC)
  • Bobby Wood, 28 (Hamburg -> Real Salt Lake)
  • Geoff Cameron, 35 (Queens Park Rangers -> FC Cincinnati)
  • Leon Flach, 19 (FC St. Pauli -> Philadelphia Union)
  • Cameron Harper, 19 (Celtic -> Red Bull New York)
  • Chris Gloster, 20 (Jong PSV -> NYCFC -> loaned to Sacramento Republic)
  • Brendan Hines-Ike, 26 (Kortrijk -> DC United)
  • Michael Edwards II, 19 (Wolfsburg II -> Colorado Rapids)
  • Brandon Austin, 22 (On loan from Tottenham -> Orlando City)
  • Damian Las, 19 (Fulham U23 -> North Carolina FC)
  • Jack Imperato, 18 (Villareal U19 -> Orange County SC)
  • Rickson van Hees, 18 (NEC Nijmegen U21 -> North Texas FC)
  • Travian Sousa, 19 (Hamburg II -> Sporting Kansas City II)
  • Jordan Adebayo-Smith, 21 (Sutton United -> Tampa Bay Rowdies)
  • Duncan Turnbull, 23 (FC Portsmouth -> Las Vegas Lights)
  • Joshua Gatt, 29 (Dundalk FC -> Pittsburgh Riverhounds)

These are players who were not making the cut in Europe, so they decided to return to MLS to find minutes. These players are not necessarily in the bottom of the player pool, but they did leave Europe so it feels weird including them higher on the list. There’s a real range here, as Leon Flach, Chris Gloster, Travian Sousa, Michael Edwards II, Cameron Harper, et al. are young and could pan out into good players if they find playing time. Flach in particular has started well in MLS. On the other hand, I doubt Bobby Wood will find enough form to rejoin the USMNT striker conversation, but he could see a career rebirth in RSL. I feel similarly about Morales, although he was doing better in the 2. Bundesliga than Wood. Cameron came home to retire, lets be real. Gatt is a throwback, and Adebayo-Smith comes from the English lower leagues, but hey who knows.

Thanks for reading! Come back for Parts 2, 3, and 4 later this week. Have any questions or qualms with how I organized this? Then leave a comment below or yell at me on Twitter, @Beardedjack

2021 NFL Draft: Best landing spots for undrafted free agents

Even with 259 picks in the 2021 draft, there are still plenty of talented players that fall through the cracks. Recent undrafted free agents to go on and find immediate success, including James Robinson, Phillip Lindsay, Deonte Harris, Allen Lazard and Charvarius Ward. This class, more than most, had a number of players that did not hear their names called, but landed in a good position to succeed in the NFL. Here are my favorite candidates to breakout as undrafted free agents.

Javian Hawkins, RB, Falcons
Atlanta’s running back room is pretty bare at this point. Mike Davis proved to be a solid starter in Carolina last year when Christian McCaffrey was injured. Qadree Ollison and Tony Brooks-James are the other veterans on the roster. Javian Hawkins is a speedster who can provide a nice change of pace in the backfield. He has limited experience as a receiver and small hands, but his speed brings a fun element to this offense. I expect he will have a chance to earn touches with a strong training camp.

Ar’Darius Washington, S, Ravens
While undersized, Ar’Darius Washington is a playmaker. He had five interceptions in 2019 and four pass breakups in 2020. Chuck Clark and DeShon Elliott have the starting roles locked down, but depth in the secondary is important. Washington could be a good fit for five- and six-defensive back sets. His size and lack of elite speed likely means he won’t be a starter in the future. It is going to be tough for him to earn a spot though with 2020 draft pick Geno Stone still in the mix.

Quintin Morris, TE, Bills
One of the biggest surprises of this draft was that Buffalo did not target the tight end position. The Bills finished fourth in tight end targets in 2020, with Dawson Knox and Tyler Kroft, who is no longer on the team, combining for 60 of the 66 passes thrown to the position. This is one of those chicken or the egg situations. Does Buffalo not utilize its tight ends in the passing game, so we don’t hold their tight ends in high regard, or are the Bills tight ends not all that good, so they don’t target them? Now that I’ve finished that thought exercise, I think Quintin Morris can work his way onto the roster and into a solid role. He caught a combined 97 passes in 2018 and 2019 at Bowling Green. He only had 20 receptions in 2020, but the Falcons only played in five games. He is a solid blocker and could work his way into a secondary tight end role.

Charles Snowden, EDGE, Bears
As was the theme of this draft, Charles Snowden was a potential Day 3 selection that fell out of the draft entirely. He has really good length and solid college production. In his final two seasons at Virginia, Snowden recorded 11 sacks. He is a bit raw, but the physical tools make a great addition as an undrafted free agent. Chicago has two proven veteran pass rushers in Khalil Mack and Robert Quinn, but there could be some room for competition behind them. He has a hard road to making the roster with Trevis Gipson and Jeremiah Attachou ahead of him, not to mention Mack’s brother, Ledarius. With his big frame though, Snowden is 6’6″, he could challenge for snaps at defensive end if he manages to put on some weight.

Marvin Wilson, DL, Browns
I’ve talked about it at length, but what a drop off for Marvin Wilson. He went from being a potential first-round pick in 2020 to undrafted in 2021. I think a change of scenery will serve the former Florida State defensive lineman well. It was a really rocky year for the Seminoles, both on and off the field. Cleveland has thrown a lot of darts at the defensive tackle position, signing Malik Jackson and Malik McDowell in addition to drafting Tommy Togiai. However, I don’t think Cleveland is totally set on its starters at the position, with only Andrew Billings (opted out in 2020) and Jordan Elliott (started one game in 2020) the two incumbent players at the position. There is buzz that Sheldon Richardson could return, but I think Wilson will have a chance to earn playing time very early if he has a good training camp and preseason.

Nolan Laufenberg, G, Broncos
One of my favorite interior lineman in this past draft, Nolan Laufenberg stays close to his alma mater by signing with Denver. He featured in a very run-heavy offense at Air Force, helping lead one of the best rushing attacks in the country as a three-year starter. He lacks elite size, but he is an above average athlete and could be a good backup for this Broncos team right away. With the injury to Ja’Wuan James, Denver will need as much offensive line depth as it can afford. If they have to start moving players to different positions because they cannot find a veteran free agent to fill the void, like the Packers did last year with Elgton Jenkins, Laufenberg might even be in line for snaps this year.

Sage Surratt, WR, Lions
Detroit’s wide receiver corps was torn down. Marvin Jones Jr., Kenny Golladay, Danny Amendola and Marvin Hall are all gone. The Lions drafted Amon-Ra St. Brown and signed veterans Breshad Perriman and Tyrell Williams, but Quintez Cephus is the only real holdover from 2020. That definitely opens up an opportunity for Sage Surratt. Surratt took the ACC by storm in 2019, but opted out in 2020 and dealt with injuries that hampered him at the Senior Bowl and at his pro day. He does not have great speed, but he can make contested catches and stretch the field. If he can get healthy, I think he has a shot to make the roster.

Christian Uphoff, S, Packers
Put in a really tough situation, it is not shocking to see Christian Uphoff go undrafted. Like many other FCS players, he lost his fall season when it was moved to the spring and knowing he wanted to play in the NFL, Uphoff did not get a chance to play football in 2020. Still, he looked solid at the Senior Bowl and could be a practice squad player for Green Bay this year with a shot to make the roster down the line. He has excellent size and good play strength. He is not the best athlete, but he has a ton of experience and could be a good special teams player if he can make the final cut.

Tyler Vaughns, WR, Colts
Indianapolis needs help at wide receiver. T.Y. Hilton still has not been re-signed. Paris Campbell cannot stay healthy. Veterans Zach Pascal and JJ Nelson are far from long-term solutions. Michael Pittman had a solid rookie year and maybe he can help his former USC teammate get up to speed. Tyler Vaughns is not an especially gifted athlete, but he has good length and hands. He was a four-year contributor for the Trojans, filling an important role as a possession receiver. The Colts could use a flashy playmaker, but moving the sticks is an invaluable trait. Don’t be surprised if Vaughns makes the roster and even sees some playing time as a rookie.

Josh Imatorbhebhe, WR, Jaguars
How in the world did Josh Imatorbhebhe go undrafted? He posted some eye-popping testing numbers at Illinois pro day. He recorded a 46.5-inch vertical, which would have beaten the NFL combine record of 45 inches. Imatorbhebhe also threw up 24 reps on the bench press, which is in the 97th percentile for receivers, and measured in with solid hand size and an impressive wingspan. I would’ve thought some team would take a chance on him on Day 3. Instead, he lands in Jacksonville, who already has a crowded receiver room, but also has a new coaching staff and not many proven playmakers. As a big-play threat with nine touchdowns in 2019, Imatorbhebhe could carve out a role with the Jaguars.

Dylan Moses, LB, Jaguars
Unlike Imatorbhebe, I know exactly why Dylan Moses went undrafted. It still does not make it any easier to believe. A former All-American at Alabama, Moses suffered a torn ACL that cost him his 2019 season. He was still projected to be a late first-round or early second-round pick had he come out in 2020. Instead, he returned to school and showed what we all feared. He lost a lot of his change of direction ability and looked like a shadow of the dominant linebacker we had witnessed in 2018. He battled through a meniscus injury and is already on the non-football injury list for the Jaguars. There are starting spots to be had in Jacksonville at linebacker. Myles Jack and Joe Schobert presumably command two of them, but Leon Jacobs, Shaq Quarterman, Roy Robertson-Harris and Damien Wilson will likely be competing for that final spot. If Moses can get healthy, a really big if at this point, I think he could make a real run at being a starter.

Riley Cole, LB, Chiefs
While Kansas City drafted Nick Bolton in the second round, I still like the decision to bring in Riley Cole. He is a sure tackler that showed he could hold his own at the Senior Bowl. He did not face the best competition at South Alabama, but he could work his way into a special teams role or situational linebacker role early in his career. I think he would be an upgrade over Darius Harris and Ben Niemann, both of whom started games for Kansas City last season. Bolton likely wins the starting job alongside Willie Gay Jr. and Anthony Hitchens, but Cole could be in line for snaps early in his career.

Darius Stills, DL, Raiders
After making the curious move to cut Maurice Hurst and then neglect the defensive tackle position in the draft, Darius Stills is a critical signing for the Raiders. Jonathan Hankins and Quinton Jefferson are the projected starters, but neither is irreplaceable at this stage. Solomon Thomas is a capable veteran, but neither Niles Scott nor Darius Philon have played since 2018. Stills arrives after posting 10.5 sacks over his final two seasons at West Virginia. He is a bit undersized, but tested well at his pro day and could work his way into a rotational role very early on, given the Raiders lack of proven depth at the position.

Alaric Jackson, OT, Rams
The Rams completely ignored their offensive line in the draft. Andrew Whitworth turns 40 this year and the team has very little depth on the interior. Alaric Jackson has the size and experience to be a solid swing tackle or maybe even interior lineman starting this year. He played tackle at Iowa, but his short arms (32.5 inches) might make him a better fit at guard instead. Either way, I think Jackson could have an easy path to making the roster with very little proven depth along this offensive front.

Hamilcar Rashed Jr., EDGE, Jets
The Jets desperately need pass rushers. New York finished in the bottom third of the league in sacks for what feels like at least the 10th year in a row. It’s been a long time since this team has been capable of pressuring opposing quarterbacks on a consistent basis. I will be interested to see how Hamilcar Rashed Jr. fits in this defense. He is built like a 3-4 outside linebacker, but he could be a situational speed rusher on third down for New York. He put together a monster 2019 season with 14 sacks. His zero-sack 2020 season is likely what caused him to go undrafted, but he has flashed the potential to be incredibly disruptive. If Rashed gets anywhere near his 2019 form, not those sack numbers, but just consistently creating pressure, this will be a steal for the Jets.

Kenny Yeboah, TE, Jets
In addition to pass rushers, the Jets definitely need some help at tight end as well. Chris Herndon is in a make or break year. Ryan Griffin is a solid veteran, but fits better as a No. 2 option. Trevon Wesco has not done much in his first two seasons and Tyler Kroft is a journeyman with a lengthy injury history. That opens the door for Kenny Yeboah to make some noise. He had a great pre-draft process, looking sharp at the Senior Bowl and tested decently well at Ole Miss’ pro day. After being buried on the depth chart and failing to stand out at Temple, Yeboah put up some strong numbers for the Rebels in Lane Kiffin’s offense. He is best used as a move tight end and could be an intriguing option in New York.

Jamie Newman, QB, Eagles
I had projected a big 2020 season from Jamie Newman after he transferred to Georgia, putting him in the first round of my way-too-early 2021 mock draft. Needless to say, that didn’t happen. Newman lost the starting job and then opted out. He did not look good at the Senior Bowl and struggled at Georgia’s pro day. There are moments of his film at Wake Forest that are special. For the Eagles, who are clearly trusting Jalen Hurts to run the offense, this is a fun project with tons of upside. If Hurts struggles, Newman could be a potential future option. More likely, the team will target a quarterback with one of its likely three first-round picks in 2022, but this is a savvy move by Philadelphia.

Shakur Brown, CB, Steelers
Pittsburgh’s secondary took a hit this offseason. The team cut Steven Nelson to save cap space and lost Mike Hilton in free agency. Joe Hayden is clearly the top option with Justin Layne and Cameron Sutton behind him. After that, there is very little depth. Shakur Brown could be in line for some snaps this season in that nickel corner role with Hilton gone. He is a bit undersized, but Brown was a playmaker at Michigan State. He had five interceptions this past season for the Spartans. He did not test well at his pro day, but I think his game speed might be slightly better than his 40-time would indicate. Brown will never be a fixture on the outside, but he could make the roster as a slot corner.

Tamorrion Terry, WR, Seahawks
A rough 2020 season tanked Tamorrion Terry’s draft stock. Jordan Travis did not have a great year, which I think could be a big reason for his drop off in production. Terry had 700-plus yards and eight touchdowns in 2018. He followed that up with nearly 1,200 yards and nine touchdowns in 2019. For him to finish out his career with 289 yards and one touchdown in his final season is incredibly disappointing. That being said, I think he will bounce back in Seattle. D.K. Metcalf and Tyler Lockett are the clear starters and the Seahawks spent a second-round pick on D’Wayne Eskridge. Freddie Swain is probably locked in as the fourth receiver, but there is definitely room for a fifth or sixth receiver on this roster. Aaron Fuller and fellow undrafted free agent Cade Johnson will probably be Terry’s biggest competition, but his size, length and athleticism could give him the inside track to making the roster.

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Draft Season Never Ends – 2021 NFL draft recap and 2022 sneak preview

Episode three is here! Chris and James are back to break down the draft. They each pick their favorite and least favorite team drafts and the best value picks from the later rounds. Plus, a short look ahead to the 2022 draft class.

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