The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Draft’s popularity has skyrockete­d

NFL event in April has become a cottage industry for analysts who have to feed a never-ending hunger for informatio­n.

- By Rick Maese

Ten men gathered in the war room to run through NFL draft scenarios, what-ifs and trade possibilit­ies. The conversati­on soon turned to the subject of Johnny Manziel, the former first-round bust who is attempting an NFL comeback, and the seasoned scouts and draft enthusiast­s around the table wondered how he compared with Baker Mayfield and the other top quarterbac­ks in this year’s draft class.

“Johnny Manziel was a better football player to me than Mayfield,” someone said.

“They’re totally different,” offered another. “I think Mayfield’s better in the pocket. Johnny’s more athletic.”

“This is getting way in the weeds,” Daniel Jeremiah piped in, “but to me Manziel is in the developmen­tal category, which puts him with Josh Allen. Whereas Mayfield is less of a developmen­tal guy. He can play in a normal structure.”

This draft discussion happens every day, but it takes place away from any NFL team’s headquarte­rs. It is show prep that includes Jeremiah, a former college quarterbac­k turned former NFL scout turned current TV draft analyst, and an NFL Network crew that churns through draft-related topics for an hour every weeknight on a show called “Path to the Draft,” plus an additional hour every Tuesday on another program called “Mock Draft Live.”

The network’s lively war room amounts to just a small window into the all-consuming, round-the-clock, unending frenzy the NFL draft has turned into.

Jeremiah, 40, is part of a new generation of analysts in what was essentiall­y a oneman media monopoly until relatively recently. ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr. endured years of mockery for his interest in a niche event that’s essentiall­y a series of roster transactio­ns. Today it’s second to only the NFL playoffs on the football calendar in terms of fan interest and media coverage.

The draft is spread over three days and will be held in a football stadium in front of 30,000 fans. Its opening night will be broadcast live on three major networks this year — with Fox joining ESPN and NFL Network — and will be preceded by hundreds of hours of TV updates and a nonstop stream of Twitter analysis, YouTube clips and speculatio­n from a growing class of self-appointed experts armed primarily with an internet connection and varying degrees of football smarts. It’s a cottage industry that suddenly features a handful of skyscraper­s and no shortage of folks trying to get into the neighborho­od.

“All the sarcasm and the ridicule and the negativity about the draft and about who covers it back in the day … you don’t hear any of that anymore,” Kiper said. “That’s kind of satisfying. Nobody is getting criticized anymore. There’s none of the commentary that’s negative about, ‘Why do people do this? Who would care about that? They’re wasting their time doing this,’ and all that garbage.”

Draft kingpins

Barely a decade ago, the draft was presided over primarily by three knowledgea­ble kingpins: Kiper and Todd McShay from ESPN and the NFL Network’s Mike Mayock.

There are now dozens of podcasts, websites and social media accounts dedicated to the draft, several others dedicated to aggregatin­g them, and several more focused on critiquing them. In addition to mainstream media and traditiona­l football outlets, fans can type in seemingly interchang­eable words and come up with a mock draft, among them: NFLDraftSc­out. com, DraftSite.com, MyNFLDraft.com, DraftBlast­er. com, NFLDraftEx­press.com, DraftKing.com, NFLMocks. com. You get the idea.

There is even a website, WalterFoot­ball.com, that houses a database of more than 300 mock drafts from a variety of gurus, experts and bar stool general managers. For the most part, the authors aren’t former players or scouts.

“It’s not just seasonal, like it used to be,” said Phil Savage, a longtime NFL personnel executive who is now the executive director of the Senior Bowl. “Mel Kiper blazed the trail and you’ve seen a lot of people follow. I would say there’s certain media members you’re going to listen to a bit more — that you can trust — and Daniel is right near the top of that.”

Savage is the one who gave Jeremiah his first scouting job 16 years ago. Back then, scouts had to travel around and lay eyes on a prospect. They carried cases of Betamax tapes, then DVDs and later external hard drives. Nowadays, informatio­n is accessible to anyone with an internet connection. Virtually every player has highlights available on YouTube, their vital measuremen­ts and football stats all readily available.

“I know it can frustrate some people — ‘Oh, these people don’t know what they’re talking about.’ But I think it’s great,” Jeremiah said. “The more interest there is in this event, the better it is for all of us.”

Jeremiah starts most days early, leaving his home in Murrieta, Calif., by 4 a.m. to beat traffic. He records podcasts and writes for NFL.com, but the draft-specific television programmin­g offers his biggest platform, and his entire year builds to the few weeks in March and April when draft interest peaks.

On a recent morning, after the war-room production meeting and a quick bite, Jeremiah walked into the smaller of the network’s two studios to rehearse and prerecord a couple of segments.

“Deej, what’d you do for lunch?” a cameraman asked.

“Little turkey sandwich,” Jeremiah said. “I give it a C-minus.”

He can’t help himself. Jeremiah assigns grades to everything. It’s what he learned at his first scouting job with the Baltimore Ravens.

Jeremiah played quarterbac­k in college, first at Northeaste­rn Louisiana and then Appalachia­n State. He knew early on the NFL draft wasn’t in the cards for him as a player, but he was invited to work for ESPN as a production assistant on draft coverage while he was still in college. Jeremiah’s father is the nationally renowned pastor David Jeremiah, who’d befriended ESPN reporter Chris Mortensen.

“I answered his phone calls,” Jeremiah recalled, “all the GMs calling him while he was on the air. I was enamored.”

After college, ESPN kept Jeremiah around as a lowlevel crew member for its “Sunday Night Football” telecasts. In the press box at one game, he found himself chatting with a scout for Baltimore. A seed was planted, and before long Jeremiah was talking to Savage, the Ravens’ former personnel executive.

“It never even crossed my mind before that,” he said.

Jeremiah scouted for the Ravens for four years, rising quickly up the ranks before moving on to the Cleveland Browns, with whom Savage had taken a job as general manager. After a 10-6 season in 2007, the Browns finished 4-12 in 2008 and the whole staff was shown the door.

“Honestly, the way it was all sort of setting up after the 2007 season, I felt like he was on a really fast track,” Savage said. “If I hadn’t have gotten released at end of that year and we had a bit more time, I think Daniel would’ve easily been a GM candidate over these last few years.”

Jeremiah was still paid by the Browns for another 18 months, so he didn’t need to race to another NFL team. After consulting Mortensen, he jumped on social media, writing “Twitter scout” in his bio. He was ready to finally scratch that media itch.

In the lead-up to the 2010 NFL draft, Jeremiah found himself opposite Skip Bayless on the set of “First Take” on ESPN’s Bristol, Conn., campus. The first topic the two were asked to debate: Should the Rams take Sam Bradford or Tim Tebow with the first overall pick?

“He was all-in on Tebow,” Jeremiah recalled with a chuckle. “I said it makes sense if they want to take Tebow — he’d do a nice job blocking for Steven Jackson.”

With an NFL lockout looming, ESPN, which had been using Jeremiah for some remote on-air hits to discuss draft prospects, didn’t have a job to offer him. So Jeremiah went back into scouting, hired in 2010 by Howie Roseman, the Philadelph­ia Eagles general manager. The job already felt different than when he started eight years earlier.

“My favorite part of scouting was watching players,” he said. “But the whole profession has drifted away from that.”

He estimates that when he broke into the NFL, 70 percent of the job involved evaluating talent and 30 percent was doing background research on players. “It’s totally flipped,” he says. “Scouts spend so much time working as some sort of private investigat­or . ... I think scouts have been marginaliz­ed to a great degree. They’re informatio­n-gatherers now.”

After two seasons with the Eagles, Jeremiah says he passed on an offer from ESPN and joined the league’s media arm, which had identified the draft as a major growth area. That was nearly six years ago, and as NFL. com and the NFL Network have ramped up their draft coverage, Jeremiah has seen his role increase. This year will mark the second straight draft for Jeremiah on the network’s main desk for the opening night, which puts him in the spotlight for one of the league’s marquee events.

Talking sports

Jeremiah has a clean-cut look, hair sculpted for the camera and not a hint of stubble. On a recent day, he wore a gray suit with a vest but no tie. He tends to move briskly across NFL Network’s campus, his schedule usually packed with TV, his “Move the Sticks” podcast, meetings or outside media interviews.

The job of talking about draft prospects on television leaves few work hours for actually studying them, which is why Jeremiah’s player evaluation is done almost entirely in the evenings or on weekends in front of a computer or tablet, accessing the same video NFL teams use. His goal was to finish 380 players by early April.

As an NFL scout, he was largely responsibl­e for a region of the country and had to cast his net over everyone, including guys who might be free-agent options.

“You’re watching more bad players than good players,” he said. “With this job, I’m focusing just on the guys who are draftable.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? After being selected by the Browns in the first round of the 2014 NFL draft, quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel was out of football last season.
AP FILE After being selected by the Browns in the first round of the 2014 NFL draft, quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel was out of football last season.
 ?? AP FILE ?? Former Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield, who won the Heisman Trophy last season, is expected to be selected in the first round of the NFL draft later this month.
AP FILE Former Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield, who won the Heisman Trophy last season, is expected to be selected in the first round of the NFL draft later this month.

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