Thursday, April 2, 2026

The Horizontal Build: How Washington Reconstructed Its Roster Through a Trade‑Down Draft

On this post, the human did the draft. A.I. wrote the post. 

The qualities and virtues ascribed to Dan Quinn and Adam Peters might be science fiction. 

But hey. Mock Drafts are fantasies. 

The Washington Commanders entered this draft with a familiar tension: the gravitational pull of a top‑10 pick versus the structural needs of a roster still in the early stages of its rebuild. Instead of anchoring themselves to a single blue‑chip selection, Washington chose a different path — a horizontal draft, one that spreads capital across the spine of the roster and builds identity through volume, versatility, and developmental arcs.

This is a Dan Quinn–Adam Peters draft in the truest sense: long corners, explosive perimeter weapons, athletic interior linemen, and a commitment to depth as a strategic weapon. The trades — down from 7, then again from 17, 55, and 71 — weren’t evasions. They were architectural decisions.

What follows is the story of that architecture.


Washington’s 2026 Identity Snapshot

1. Defensive Length and Matchup Flexibility

Quinn’s defenses thrive on corners who can press, disrupt, and survive on islands. Length isn’t a luxury — it’s the organizing principle.

2. Offensive Spacing and Catch‑Radius Expansion

Jayden Daniels needs a receiving ecosystem built around:

  • Big frames
  • RAC threats
  • Vertical stressors
  • Middle‑field attackers

This draft delivers all four.

3. Athletic Interior OL for a Timing‑Based Offense

The Commanders want linemen who can move — reach, climb, redirect — but also anchor when the pocket compresses.

4. Depth as a Strategic Weapon

This roster isn’t one superstar away. It’s a dozen playable contributors away. Peters drafted accordingly.


Round‑by‑Round: The Picks and the Identity They Build

22. Denzel Boston — WR, Washington

Boundary Technician with a Trust‑Throw Profile

Boston is the kind of receiver who expands the strike zone for a young quarterback. At 6’4” with late hands, smooth acceleration, and excellent body control, he gives Daniels a perimeter target who can win even when the play isn’t clean.

Why it fits: Washington needed a true boundary alpha to stabilize the passing game. Boston becomes the WR who makes the offense feel bigger.


50. Davison Igbinosun — CB, Ohio State

Long, Physical, Press‑Comfortable Corner

Igbinosun brings SEC‑to‑Big Ten battle scars and the exact traits Quinn covets: length, physicality, and comfort in press‑man. He’s a CB2 with CB1 upside — the kind of corner who changes how a defense aligns.

Why it fits: Washington’s secondary needed size and edge. Igbinosun gives them both.


62. Keith Abney II — CB, Arizona State

Twitchy, Disruptive, Slot/Outside Hybrid

Abney is the counterweight to Igbinosun — quicker, twitchier, more reactive. He can play inside or outside, trigger downhill, and disrupt timing routes.

Why it fits: Washington lacked a true slot defender who could run. Abney fills that void immediately.


78. Dani Dennis‑Sutton — EDGE, Penn State

Power‑Based Rotational Rusher with Upside

Dennis‑Sutton is a traits pick: heavy hands, strong edge‑setting, and the ability to reduce inside. He’s not a finished product, but he fits Quinn’s “waves of rushers” philosophy.

Why it fits: Washington needs rotational violence on the edge. DDS is built for it.


111. Parker Brailsford — C, Alabama

Hyper‑Athletic Zone Center with Elite Leverage

Brailsford is a movement specialist — quick reach blocks, clean angles, and the leverage to win despite a smaller frame. He’s the kind of center who makes wide‑zone and RPO timing feel effortless.

Why it fits: Daniels thrives when the interior is synchronized. Brailsford is a synchronizer.


147. Charlie Demmings — CB, Stephen F. Austin

Small‑School Length Corner with Developmental Upside

Demmings brings length, competitiveness, and ball skills. He’s raw, but the traits are real.

Why it fits: Quinn has a long history of turning Day 3 corners into contributors. Demmings is the next experiment.


156. Malik Benson — WR, Oregon

Vertical Accelerator Who Stretches the Field

Benson is pure speed — a receiver who forces safeties to widen and corners to panic. He’s not a volume target; he’s a spacing weapon.

Why it fits: Boston gives Daniels a big target. Benson gives him a runway.


187. Delby Lemieux — C, Dartmouth

Gargantuan, Power‑Oriented Center with Anchor Strength

Lemieux is the opposite of Brailsford — massive, powerful, and built to anchor against NFL nose tackles. He’s not a movement player, but he doesn’t need to be. [I think the Mock Draft People got his weight wrong. Dude looks lean to this human.]

Why it fits: Washington now has two OL identities:

  • Brailsford: movement and reach
  • Lemieux: power and anchor

This is how you build a flexible run game.


209. Dae’Quan Wright — TE, Ole Miss

Move TE with Seam‑Stretching Ability

Wright is a mismatch piece — too fast for linebackers, too big for safeties. He gives Washington a TE who can actually threaten the middle of the field.

Why it fits: Daniels needed a TE who could win, not just block. Wright is that.


223. Athan Kaliakmanis — QB, Rutgers

Traits‑Based Developmental Quarterback

Athan brings mobility, arm strength, and flashes of high‑level play. He’s inconsistent, but as a QB3 with upside, he’s a smart swing.

Why it fits: Peters believes in always having a developmental QB in the pipeline.


The Story This Draft Tells

1. Washington rebuilt its cornerback room from the ground up.

Igbinosun + Abney + Demmings = length, speed, and developmental depth.

2. The WR room is now a complete ecosystem.

  • Boston: boundary alpha
  • Benson: vertical stressor
  • Wright: middle‑field attacker

This is how you build spacing for Daniels.

3. The interior OL now has dual identities.

  • Brailsford: movement
  • Lemieux: power

This gives Washington flexibility in run‑game design.

4. The defensive front gained another rotational piece.

DDS fits Quinn’s “waves of rushers” philosophy.

5. The roster’s middle 40 players got better.

This is the hallmark of a Peters draft.


Final Thoughts: A Draft About Structure, Not Splash

Washington didn’t chase a single savior. They built a roster.
They built layers.
They built identity.

This is the kind of draft that doesn’t win headlines in April but wins games in November — when injuries mount, matchups tighten, and depth becomes destiny.


Here's the Receipt:


 

Friday, March 27, 2026

Drafting the Future: How the 2026 NFL Draft Board Converges on Washington’s No. 7 Pick

Here, A.I. assesses Washington's No. 7 Pick: 

"Every draft cycle has its own weather system — a set of atmospheric pressures, positional currents, and cultural winds that shape how teams behave. Some years are quarterback monsoons. Some years are wide‑receiver bloom cycles. And some years, like 2026, are defined by a defensive jet stream that sweeps across the entire first round."

"Washington enters this draft with six picks and a roster that has been aggressively re‑architected through free agency. What remains is a set of long‑term structural needs — cornerback, edge rusher, wide receiver, interior line depth — that align almost eerily well with the strengths of this year’s class."

"To understand what Washington is likely to do at No. 7, we need to look through three lenses:
(1) league‑wide draft trends, (2) team identity, and (3) board dynamics.
Only when all three are layered together does the picture come into focus."


"I. The League‑Wide Weather System: A Defensive First Round

"The 2026 class is shaped by a few unmistakable patterns:

"1. Defense dominates the top 10

"EDGE, CB, and hybrid LB/EDGE defenders form the backbone of the early board. The offensive class is good, but not generational. The gravitational pull is on defense."

"2. The EDGE class is unusually deep

"David Bailey, Rueben Bain Jr., Keldric Faulk, T.J. Parker — four players with top‑15 traits. This depth creates a ripple effect: teams feel comfortable waiting, which pushes corners and receivers into sharper relief."

"3. A clear CB1 emerges

"LSU’s Mansoor Delane is the consensus top corner. His presence creates a natural pivot point for teams in the 5–12 range."

"4. The WR class is strong at the top

"Carnell Tate, Makai Lemon, Jordyn Tyson — a trio of receivers with WR1 upside. Not a historic class, but a strategically important one."

"5. Versatility is the new premium

"Hybrid defenders — LB/S, EDGE/LB — are no longer luxuries. They’re structural necessities in modern sub‑package defenses."

"This is the macro‑climate Washington is drafting inside."


"II. The Washington Identity: Dan Quinn’s Architectural Blueprint

"Washington’s roster is no longer a patchwork. It’s a structure with clear load‑bearing beams and equally clear gaps.

"1. Quinn’s defense demands specific archetypes

  • Press‑capable corners with length
  • Explosive edge rushers who win early
  • LB/S hybrids who can disguise coverages"

"2. The roster’s thinnest point is cornerback

"Even after free agency, Washington lacks a true CB1. The scheme requires one."

"3. EDGE is deep but lacks a long‑term star

"There are bodies, but not a foundational piece."

"4. WR needs a reliable WR2

"McLaurin is still the axis, but the offense needs a second gravitational body."

"5. Interior OL and RB are long‑term depth needs

"Not urgent, but unavoidable."

"This identity filter pushes Washington toward CB or EDGE at No. 7, with WR as the offensive pivot."


"III. The Board Dynamics: A Scenario Tree for Picks 1–10

"To understand Washington’s choice, we simulate the first 10 picks — not as predictions, but as a coherent draft‑board narrative."

"Picks 1–6: The Setup

  1. QB1
  2. OT1
  3. QB2
  4. WR1 (non‑Tate)
  5. OT2
  6. EDGE David Bailey"

"This is the most structurally plausible opening: QB/OT early, then the first elite defender."

"Pick 7: Washington’s Moment

"On the board:

"This is the crossroads where all three filters converge."

"Most likely selection:

→ CB Mansoor Delane, LSU"

"The cleanest fit. The clearest need. The most stable projection across all scenarios."

"Alternate:

→ EDGE Rueben Bain Jr., Miami"

"If Washington has Bain graded as a top‑five player, this becomes a real conversation."

"Offensive pivot:

→ WR Carnell Tate, Ohio State"

"If the defensive board collapses or if Washington wants to build around their young QB with a premium weapon."

"Picks 8–10: The Aftermath

  1. WR Carnell Tate (if Washington passes)
  2. EDGE Rueben Bain Jr. (if still available)
  3. CB2 (start of the cornerback run)"

"The board reacts immediately to Washington’s choice."


"IV. The Commanders‑Only Draft Board

"This is the distilled, war‑room version — the board Washington would pin to the wall."

"Tier 1 — Premium Targets at No. 7

RankPlayerPositionWhy
1Mansoor DelaneCBCB1, perfect Quinn prototype
2Rueben Bain Jr.EDGEExplosive, versatile, high‑motor
3Carnell TateWRWR1 traits, offensive pivot
4David BaileyEDGEIf Bain is gone, Bailey is the next anchor"

"Tier 2 — Priority Targets for Round 3 (Pick 71)


"Tier 3 — Day 3 Archetypes (Rounds 5–7)

  • RB with vision + contact balance
  • IOL depth with G/C flexibility
  • EDGE rotational piece with one elite trait
  • LB/S hybrid for dime packages
  • Developmental CB/S with length or speed
  • Developmental OL for swing‑tackle pipeline"

"V. The Synthesis: Why Delane Is the Center of Gravity

"When you overlay:

  • the league‑wide defensive tilt,
  • the Commanders’ structural needs, and
  • the likely shape of the first six picks,

"you get a draft board that keeps circling back to one name:

"Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU

"He is the cleanest intersection of value, need, and identity.
"He is the player who stabilizes the entire defensive architecture.
"He is the pick that makes the rest of the draft fall into place."


"VI. The Ritual of the Draft

"Every draft is a ritual of reconstruction — a team re‑imagining itself through the bodies and traits of young players. Washington’s 2026 draft is not about plugging holes. It’s about establishing the next decade’s defensive spine and giving their offense a second star to orbit around."

"The board is deep. The needs are clear. The architecture is ready."

"Pick 7 is where the future begins."

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Commanders Mock Draft 3.1415926

I didn't address the Washington Commanders' Center position with this mock.

John Keim suggests we practice deep breathing. But with the under center approach, anxiety is understandable if the center you are under is getting blown up by NFC Beastly Bulkydudenesses. With Jayden new to under center, I could see Double A Gap--three hats on the Nose--being a problem where he is caught immediately post snap. Does he panic?

I'd do that on defense against Jayden first snap. Get him traumatized. Hook the Commanders into a bad start. If they don't recover, its a bad year and goodbye Brotherhood.

The Zen Solution is apparently Nick Allegretti. He's got the brains for Center. Is he powerful enough? We'll see. It is not as if starting a rookie there is very Zen either. 

Hopefully, Keim is right.

The Commanders are still a .500 football team according to prognosticators. 

24. Denzel Boston WR Washington HighlightsStatsCombine Interview.

39. Chris Johnson CB  San Diego State HighlightsJWAC Gridiron. Combine InterviewStats.

70. Mike Washington, Jr. RB  Arkansas Highlights. Stats. Hog Pod.

71. Treydan Stukes CB Arizona HighlightsStatsKing Cold EvalCombine Interview.

147. Dallen Bentley TE Utah Highlights. Stats. Combine Interview. Lions Interest.

187. Kendal Daniels LB Oklahoma Okie StateBest Safety. Draft Center. 2025 Highlights. Stats. Played LB last year. Had 5.5 sacks as a safety. Shouts big nickel to me.

209. Cole Payton QB North Dakota State HighlightsInterview. Locked on NFL Draft. Kurt WarnerNot likely to be there at 209. Rumor is Payton is nearing Round 2. Warner didn't cover his long runs. And he's faster than 4.56. Needs some bench time. Washington has that to offer. With plenty return on the investment a distinct possibility.

 223. De'Zhaun Stribling WR Ole Miss HighlightsCombine InterviewStats. Sub 4.4 with blocking skills.

Receipt:


 

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

Fridge Post-It Notes: Carnell Tate to D.C.

Conducted a survey of Round in the NFL using the Pro Football and Sports Network Draft Simulator.

Did a run through of all their listed databases in the drop down menu.

The Winner was Carnell Tate who was picked by the Simulator three times. 

PFSN Database: Caleb Downs.

Consensus Database: Jerimyah Love

ESPN Database: Carnell Tate

PFF Database: Arvell Reese

The Athletic Database: Carnell Tate

User ADP Database: Carnell Tate 

NFL Trade Rumors cited Todd McShay defining the Commanders No. 7 pick as a target for teams coveting Jerimyah Love. There are going to be offers for the Pick. 

Draft Visit Tracker by NFL Trade Rumors.

Hogs Haven Visit Meeting Tracker

NFL Trade Rumors Top Free Agents Remaining as of 3-18-2026

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Why the Washington Commanders’ Fanbase Absolutely Includes Virginia — Even When Broadcasters Say Otherwise

The following is the synthetic version of a conversation I had with A.I. 

"Every now and then, a Washington Commanders broadcaster triggers confusion by declaring that Virginia 'isn’t part of the D.C. area.' For fans in Arlington, Alexandria, Fairfax County, Loudoun, Prince William — and even farther south in Richmond or Charlottesville — this can sound dismissive or even insulting. After all, the Commanders’ footprint across Virginia is deep, historic, and economically essential."

"So why would a broadcaster say something that contradicts the team’s own operations, marketing, and radio‑affiliate map?"

"The answer isn’t geography.
"It isn’t fanbase.
"It isn’t revenue.
"It isn’t even team policy."

"It’s broadcast‑rights confusion, wrapped in sloppy regional shorthand."


"1. The Official Reality: Virginia Is Core Commanders Territory

"Let’s start with what’s actually true.

  • The Commanders’ headquarters and training facility are in Ashburn, Virginia.
  • The team has actively pursued Virginia for potential stadium sites.
  • The Washington media market (the Nielsen DMA) includes all of Northern Virginia.
  • The Commanders’ radio network has affiliates as far south as Richmond, Charlottesville, and sometimes Hampton Roads."

"If the team didn’t consider Virginia part of its fanbase, none of this would exist.
"Virginia isn’t peripheral — it’s foundational."


"2. So Why Do Broadcasters Say 'Virginia Isn’t the D.C. Area'?

"This is where the misunderstanding begins."

"When a broadcaster says:

'We don’t cover UVA because it’s not the D.C. area.'

they are not talking about geography or fanbase."

"They are talking about broadcast rights — but using the wrong vocabulary."

"What rights actually restrict:

  • airing UVA games
  • airing UVA highlight audio
  • using UVA‑owned media assets
  • promoting UVA broadcasts"

"What rights do not restrict:

  • talking about UVA
  • analyzing UVA
  • discussing UVA’s tournament position
  • reacting to UVA news
  • debating UVA matchups"

"Commentary is unrestricted."
"Stations can talk about UVA all day long if they want to."

"What they cannot do is broadcast UVA games or highlights, because those rights belong to Learfield and Virginia Sports Properties."

"Instead of explaining that on air, broadcasters often fall back on a vague shorthand:

'That’s not the D.C. area.'”

"It’s not accurate — but it’s quick."


"3. The Ironic Twist: They Freely Discuss Teams Thousands of Miles Away

"Here’s the contradiction that exposes the problem:

  • They avoid UVA commentary, claiming it’s 'not the D.C. area.'
  • But they freely discuss teams like Kansas, Gonzaga, Arizona, UCLA, or Kentucky — teams literally 2,000–3,000 miles away."

"Why?

"Because those teams aren’t tied to local broadcast‑rights packages.
"Talking about them doesn’t step on another station’s exclusivity."

"So the 'not the D.C. area' line collapses under its own weight.
"It’s not about geography.
"It’s not about fanbase.
"It’s not about market reach."

"It’s simply a way to avoid explaining rights contracts on air."


"4. Why This Matters for Charlottesville and Central Virginia Fans

"Charlottesville sits north of Richmond, and Richmond is a long‑standing Commanders affiliate market.
"Charlottesville stations have carried Commanders games.
"The UVA–Commanders fan overlap is enormous."

"So when a broadcaster dismisses UVA as 'outside the D.C. area,' it can feel like a slight — even though the Commanders organization itself:

  • depends on Virginia fans
  • markets to Virginia
  • sells tickets to Virginia
  • broadcasts deep into Virginia
  • operates out of Virginia"

"The disconnect is not organizational."

"It’s rhetorical."


"5. The Real Story: Rights Boundaries Masquerading as Regional Identity

"What we’re seeing is a collision of:

  • legal broadcast restrictions
  • sports‑radio identity habits
  • 'inside the Beltway' cultural shorthand
  • a reluctance to explain rights contracts on air"

"The result is a misleading phrase — 'not the D.C. area' — that unintentionally alienates fans in markets the Commanders absolutely rely on."

"The Commanders aren’t rejecting Virginia.
"Their broadcasters are just using the wrong vocabulary."


"Conclusion: Virginia Is Commanders Country — Full Stop

"From Arlington to Alexandria, from Fairfax to Loudoun, from Prince William to Richmond and Charlottesville, Virginia is not just adjacent to the Commanders’ world — it is woven into the franchise’s history, operations, and future."

"The next time a broadcaster says UVA is 'outside the D.C. area,' the accurate translation is:

“We can’t broadcast UVA games or highlights — but commentary is unrestricted.”

And that’s a rights issue, not a regional one."

And I take from this that a choice has been made by people who broadcast Commanders content to redistrict a huge portion of the Commander Fanbase and a huge source of Commander Revenue into an area outside of the DMV. 

It is a DM from the DM. 

Message: There is no V

OK. I can use the money elsewhere. 

And I trust the ratings calculation for the V would be deducted as well. 

If we don't exist, it is hardly fair to charge us for advertising. And it is not fair to charge the DM the DMV rates.

Using V to up the ante.  

The Horizontal Build: How Washington Reconstructed Its Roster Through a Trade‑Down Draft

On this post, the human did the draft. A.I. wrote the post.  The qualities and virtues ascribed to Dan Quinn and Adam Peters might be scienc...