Rookie
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Re: The Blazin' Bees | A Front Office Football MP Dynasty
Meet the B-teaM
QB
#4 Randy Boone 68/68, 11th yr
11th year, 34 years old. Randy's at the top of his game. He's never even had a 4000-yard season in Utah's run-heavy attack, but make no mistake, the Bees rely on his cold-blooded efficiency. Randy delivers the wins, big time, and has never been better, coming off his first Super Bowl MVP and the most convincing title win of his career. Three rings in four years.
#14 Roderick Sikkenga 37/37, 8th yr
The current heir apparent. ex-UDFA Sik's been the understudy his entire career, and while no team is likely to pay for his services, we feel we have one of the best backup situations in the league with him around.
RB
#30 Ryan Green 44/44, 5th yr
Green wasn't expected to take the handoff of the torch at this position. A 5th-round backup for years, with an incoming round 1 rookie already charged with succeeding the team's recently retired franchise back. But he fended off the competition, and turned in a great season. He's not a carry-the-load guy, but was clearly the most reliable back in the new Utah committee.
#49 Michael Glenn 33/44, 2nd yr
Glenn's the 1st round RB that makes people say, "This is why nobody drafts RBs high anymore." He's fast, strong, and talented, but losing the job was a huge upset. He never earned a start as a rookie and averaged 3.58 ypc, fumbling 4 times. Glenn will need to prove it in his sophomore campaign.
FB
#43 Mario Evanswhite 60/60, 7th yr
Evanswhite was poached from the Washington Bombers as a young free agent, and took over the starting role after years of developing as a backup. He's an all-around, every-down fullback who blocks with aggression and is a solid outlet receiver.
#46 Kerry Duran 39/39, 9th yr
Duran caught our eye in the draft by running a 6.95 agility drill, which is the kind of result that turns heads for corners and receivers. A longtime starter, the 9-year vet has been relegated to reserve/ST duty, but has been an athletic, multi-talented fullback over the years. Utah carries two TEs because Duran's expected to answer that call when needed.
TEs
#34 Mario Bradford 60/60, 8th yr
Drafted in the same round as Duran - the 6th - one year later. Bradford started life as a fullback, but the Virginia Military product quickly made the move Duran was considered for and didn't. He's become a more than reliable cog in the short pass game, and one of the top road-grading TEs you'll find.
#85 Edwin Blades 49/55, 3rd yr
Blades was a top target for us in the '26 draft, and we traded high into the 2nd round to nab him. While Bradford does well in the short game, Bradford stretches the field like you wouldn't believe, and gives us a lethal 2-TE combo. Blades, in fact, is probably at this point, our best receiver. Period.
WRs
#89 Alvin Foley 49/49, 12th yr
Foley was the lynchpin of the Utah Air Attack for a full decade. He survived a gruesome ACL tear in 2026, though, and while he's made a comeback, it's hard to tell how much he has left in his tank. The good news for the Bees - we've shown we can win without him, even in the playoffs.
#80 Hunter Vandersommen 36/36, 11th yr
Vandy arrived in Utah via trade very early in his career, and over time developed into a #3 option. After Foley's injury, he got more chances, and wrested control of a starting spot in 2027. This guy is fast, but that's not just it. His rapport with Boone appears to be something special, and he's projected to continue in a starter role.
#81 Bryan Sidharta 55/55, 6th yr
Once upon a time, Foley had a lethal running mate in Colin Fletcher. Fletcher eventually fell out of favor with Utah brass, and was traded for the younger, slightly less explosive Sidharta. Sidharta was lost early in his first season to elbow surgery. And he lost his job to Vandersommen the next year. He has a big contract in hand, but he's not yet earned it.
#86 Ray Mansker 40/40, 6th yr
Mansker was considered a big reach as a 2.32 in 2023, and he's yet to establish himself. However, he's an extremely legitimate deep threat. One of our aces in the hole.
#87 Chester Haddix 47/47, 4th yr
Haddix turned out far better than we could have hoped for a 4th round pick. In addition to being an unexpectedly great kick returner, Haddix is a well-rounded WR that we're starting to develop a ton of confidence in.
#39 Wade Morton 34/40, 3rd yr
A former running back who made the move to the slot in the pros. Morton hasn't made the field much, but captivated coaches by dominating the hell out of every single preseason game he's been in.
#88 Shane Littlefield 35/35, 4th yr
The latest addition to Utah's WR derby. Littlefield is a total Vandersommen doppleganger, and with a weak draft pool, we were comfortable parting with a 3rd-round pick for him.
OL
#56 C Stephen Wells 65/65, 10th yr
As good a run stopper as they come.
#77 G Mo Giles 68/68, 6th yr
Total monster.
#79 G Jared Craig 42/42, 7th yr
A late round pass block specialist. Originally envisioned as a starter, but has had trouble keeping his job.
#74 G Mo Marchant 48/48, 6th yr
A more recent free agent acquisition whose better strength and run blocking ability has pushed him above Craig, although there's some rotation here.
#66 T/G Artie Samuels 52/53, 4th yr
OK, I just f'd up here. Samuels was an all-world left tackle we traded a future 1st + 2nd for, but I managed to switch him to guard and it's too late to go back. We'll be forced to play him out of position for now. He's still my best blind-side defense.
#73 T Geoff Keisel 63/63, 9th yr
Keisel was a guy we managed to trade for very little, and he's developed well over the years. He's more of a run blocker, so he's really the guy we should have moved to guard, if at all.
#70 T Max Reese 55/55, 3rd yr
We were expecting fairly little when we settled on this pick in the middle of round 2. Reese has turned out to be a fantastic pass blocker, though, and a huge steal for us.
K/P
#6 Courtney Ellison 62/62, 4th yr
We had the punter issue only semi-resolved for years before we brought in Ellison in Late Free Agency. Ellison has a huge leg...really knocks it out of the park. 48.2 average (not net) in '27.
#3 Troy Parrish 76/76, 7th yr
Parrish is just one of the top kicker's in the leg. Incredible combination of power and accuracy; weaker on the kickoffs. Now he's in a contract year.
DE
#99 Emmanuel Logan 59/59, 10th yr
Part 1 of the Denver Duo - players we nabbed via trade with our division rival Denver Grizzlies in 2021. Logan's in decline, but he's still our best pass rushing end.
#78 Rondell Tyler 53/53, 9th yr
Tyler is a 3-down run stopper with some pass rush ability, and a solid find in free agency recently.
#75 Ted Kau 29/46, 2nd yr
Last year's 1.17 pick. Nice size for a 3-4 end at 6'4, 286. Bull rush isn't really in his arsenal. At this stage....it looks like a badly blown pick.
#72 Byron LaPorte 25/50, 2nd yr
The Bees used the '27 draft to remake its DE corps. LaPorte was our 2nd rounder, but while he's stronger, he doesn't have the same pass rush potential as Kau.
DT
#76 Harris Wheeler 48/48, 7th yr
Wheeler was an unexpected Week 1 trade in 2027, solidifying a position that had been wiped out by age. Boston was desperate to get rid of him and Utah gave up only a 5th. Wheeler's been very steady, but came with an escalating contract that is becoming a concern.
#90 Doug Hopkins 34/38, 5th yr
Hopkins arrived via trade in '26, and fell really far short of projections to date. The Bees gave him another chance with a new contract, at the veteran minimum.
ILB
#50 Dan Harper 71/71, 7th yr
Harper's a fun draft story. We gave up the world for this guy, when we hit up Matty, the St. Paul Bandits GM at 2.3, looking for a trade only to find we were both targeting the same guy. At the end of it all, we had given up all four of our 2nd rounders that year...but he's captained this defense as one of the game's best linebackers.
#58 Troy Conant 53/53, 8th yr
Unlike Harper, Conant was a cheap investment - an overlooked 4th rounder that has turned into a stifling run-stopper. He's a liability in coverage and doesn't see the field in Nickel sets.
#96 Terrell McDonald 35/35, 5th yr
We seem to make a living out of poaching Washington Bombers rookie free agents, and McDonald is the latest of the series. He's not great, but acceptably solid, and earns his keep here with his special teams value.
#98 Dixon Goldade 37/47, 3rd yr
Goldade's rising behind the scenes. Primarily a run stopper; his coverage ability is a bit lacking in our eyes, but we have few other young 'backers.
OLB
#95 Norbert Slaten 55/55, 10th yr
A versatile linebacker who's been a stud his entire career for Utah, whether it was blitzing off the edge, stopping the run, or blanketing TEs. Extension talks broke down late in 2027, and now he's franchised.
#57 Matthew O'Donnell 48/48, 8th yr
O'Donnell rode the bench for years behind Part 2 of the Denver Duo, the since-departed Carlos Melnick. Melnick was the best pass rusher the Bees had ever seen. Then O'Donnell finally gets his shot, and 17.0 sacks in his first year of starting says we have a new sherrif in town...
#54 Ike Arias 42/42, 3rd yr
Arias is a pass rush specialist drafted to succeed O'Donnell. He turned in 9.5 sacks in his sophomore campaign...as a backup.
CB
#41 Quinn Robinette 62/62, 8th yr
Hard to believe that Robin has spent the past two seasons declining. We made a big move up for him in the first round, much to the dismay of Yuma Aces GM JulioRiddols - who paid us back a year later by nabbing linebacker Riddick Schulz just ahead of us.
#35 Mitchell Prescott 72/72, 6th yr
Prescott was a safety we picked early in the first round and has never made the transition as well as we hoped. He's still got the look of a safety playing out of position at corner, but we've never really had anyone better.
#32 Stephen Easton 48/48, 7th yr
Easton was a 2nd rounder we really believed in, but hasn't been consistent in coverage. We don't mind as long as he continues to be the best punt returner the league has (possibly) ever seen.
#28 Bobby Plantilla 27/34, 2nd yr
Plantilla's our rising star. Here's a hard-hitting safety who made the transition to corner beautifully, turning in a 5-pick rookie campaign.
#21 Scottie Finley 33/34, 3rd yr
Finley was an unheralded 6th round pick whose star has also been quietly rising behind the scenes here.
#23 Grady Hett 30/44, 3rd yr
Hett's a guy who lays the wood, but we're not sold on his cover abilities yet. He's a 5th round pick who's shown enough promise to not lose his job, but hasn't shined in coverage like Plantilla or Finley.
S
#31 Brent Driscoll 57/57, 8th yr
Driscoll has been a run-stopping, pass-coverage asset over the years. He's the cover / run-support total package, and he has turned in an impeccably consistent career of doing both for the Bees.
#48 Wally Burgess 67/67, 4th yr
When Burgess kept slipping in round 1 of the '25 draft, we jumped all over that s---. Burgess is the quintessential cover safety. Total ballhawk, and covers like the best of them. He's going to need to bounce back from a rough '27, though.
#44 Lance Morris 47/47, 7th yr
UDFAs aren't supposed to be this good. Morris is the picture-perfect backup safety, a ballhawking threat with athleticism and cover ability who can play either strong or free.
#20 Chester Foster 33/33, 12th yr
Foster made a big statement about his loyalties by returning to the Bees on a 1-year, low-bonus, $1.61 million deal when other teams offered considerably more. A former starter and current rotational player with 233 special teams tackle to his name, as Utah's top gunner for many seasons.
#36 Butch McKinnon 27/48, 3rd yr
We've bent over backwards to keep Butch on the final roster as 5th safety, because he's got major run-stopping potential and we see him as a successor candidate for Brent Driscoll. What he needs to do is show a coverage dimension that he hasn't yet.
The draft so far...
This was not a good draft to be in. The weakest talent pool the league has probably ever seen - teams were falling over each other trying to get out.
1.20 G Ryan Thingvold
We moved up using a 1st and a 2nd to make this unfortunate selection, just before we accidentally stuck our own LT at guard. We'll have to roll with 5 guards for the forseeable future. Thingvold was literally the last guy we had anywhere close to a Round 1 grade on.
2.12 LB Tyrone Nelson
With our star 'backer of the past ten years franchised - and having big question marks due to age anyway - we looked for someone who could replace him as early as this year. Nelson.....is a serious project. But we see some solid coverage potential in him, which is most important. If he develops into a capable run stopper, that'll be a nice bonus. He won't be a great blitzer, but at least he can do it.
2.26 T Antonio Mitting
We had to secure the last guy with a round-2 grade here. Artie Samuels moving from LT to LG means that if we're going to carry 3 tackles, we can't afford to have two older guys there or even one average one. Mitting's not very strong, but he has terrific agility and wingspan. He might get bowled over on occasion, but he's not going to be a 6'6, 325 lb turnstile.
Remaining Picks
...with a trade just finalized, the Bees have moved out of the 3rd round. We still have the following selections to make:
4.10
4.32
6.28
6.32
7.23
7.28
Unfortunately, it's looking really dry. If we're unable to keep deferring to future years, we'll have to come up with a pool of longshots here, the kind that don't make rosters.
We don't even see anyone that could conceivably stick as an undrafted free agent. But once the rounds go by and the better players move off the board, things inevitably change...
Last edited by arton86; 03-05-2013 at 04:03 PM.
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