Times Standard (Eureka)

Kickers, RBs take spotlight

- By Barry Wilner

Running backs and kickers — kickers? — were a focus for much of Day 3 of the NFL draft on Saturday.

Two punters and a placekicke­r went as the final day of selections began before any more quarterbac­ks were taken as most of the 32 NFL teams decided to pass on passers in what has been deemed a weak crop. So maybe it shouldn’t be surprising that LSU placekicke­r Cade York went to Cleveland at No. 124 overall, followed by Penn State punter Jordan Stout six spots later to Baltimore. At No. 133 to Tampa Bay it was punter Jake Camarda of Georgia — four spots before the fifth quarterbac­k in total, Western Kentucky’s Bailey Zappe, headed to New England.

Of course, it can’t be ignored that the Patriots once had some luck with a late-round QB. What was his name?

“With the draft, it’s always a tossup, but I did have a good idea that I was going to be a Raven,” said Stout, who will compete with veteran Sam Koch. “I’m extremely excited about it.”

“One big thing for me is that I know special teams is always very successful with the Ravens.”

True. Justin Tucker has been the most accurate placekicke­r in NFL history, and Koch has been a mainstay in Baltimore since 2006.

Cleveland saw in York exactly what every team wants in a kicker with a game on the line: utter confidence.

“I believe that I am the best kicker in this draft because I have been able to make big kicks in big situations,” he said. “I have been put out for a lot of long field goals in tough situations, and I still brought out good results in it. I think that is what makes me the best.”

Many scouts considered Camarda the best punter in the nation. He was the 11th player selected from the national champs.

“I think it has certainly prepared me for the next level, playing at Georgia for four years, playing in every single biggest game you can possibly imagine,” Camarda noted. “The Bucs certainly are a team that’s looking to make a big run. I definitely think that’s something with my history, playing in those big games and big moments, I certainly think it’s going to help play being with the Bucs.”

One more punter, San Diego State’s left-footed Matt Araiza, was the opening pick of the sixth round, by Buffalo. He’ll go from kicking in the pristine conditions of San Diego to the often-frigid Western New York.

“I’m kind of excited for that challenge,” said Araiza, who would someday like to punt, placekick and hold in the NFL. “I love it. I think the biggest job in the NFL is to out-punt the player across from you. As long as I can bring better field position to my team than the team we’re playing against, that’s kind of my goal.

“I think leg strength and athleticis­m are two things that help a lot in the conditions. Those are two things I pride myself in and two things I’ll continue to work on. So I’m excited and I’m confident I’ll be able to do well in these conditions.”

The philosophy of taking running backs deeper into proceeding­s is nothing new, and several highly accomplish­ed ball carriers were taken in Round 4. After Tampa Bay made tight end Cade Otton of Washington the leadoff pick — Rob Gronkowski has not publicly committed to return — Houston grabbed RB Dameon Pierce of Florida. From there, the likes of Zamir White of Georgia, Isaiah Spiller of Texas A&M, Pierre Strong, a standout from South Dakota State of the FCS and Hassan Haskins of Michigan went off the board.

Of the 38 fourth-rounders, including compensato­ry choices, 20 were on offense, 15 on defense, and the three special-teamers.

The fifth round, however, got started with Washington grabbing North Carolina QB Sam Howell, who was projected as a much higher selection just a year ago, but didn’t have an outstandin­g final season for the Tar Heels.

Howell called it “a little stressful” to sit through four rounds.

“I was just hanging out and just waiting for a call, and I’m so glad it was Washington that called,” Howell said. “This is a perfect spot for me. It’s a team I wanted to play for all along.”

Zappe wasn’t hearing from any comparison­s to New England’s 2000 sixth rounder at No. 199, Tom Brady.

“I am continuing to be myself,” he said. “I am not trying to be anybody else. I am going to come to work every day and get 1% better. That is how I look at it. I do not worry too much about the naysayers and critics. The Patriots believe in me, and those coaches, players, and organizati­on believed in me, and those are the people I’m going to try to prove right, that this pick was the right one.”

No surprise that the national champion Georgia Bulldogs were dominating these proceeding­s, either. They set a record through six rounds by having 15 selected: eight on defense, six on offense, and punter Camarda.

 ?? BUTCH DILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? LSU kicker Cade York (36) boots a field goal during the second quarter against Auburn in October 2020. The Browns selected York in the fourth round (124th overall) of the NFL draft on Saturday.
BUTCH DILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE LSU kicker Cade York (36) boots a field goal during the second quarter against Auburn in October 2020. The Browns selected York in the fourth round (124th overall) of the NFL draft on Saturday.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Seahawks fans cheer during the third day of the NFL draft on Saturday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seahawks fans cheer during the third day of the NFL draft on Saturday in Las Vegas.

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