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		<title>How SF surfers rescued the Sundown dive bar Pitt’s Pub</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/how-sf-surfers-rescued-the-sundown-dive-bar-pitts-pub/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2023 05:59:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=25653</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>For decades, Pittsburgh&#8217;s Pub was the Outer Sunset&#8217;s most notorious watering hole. It opened at 8 am and stayed open until 2 am It had a fireplace without a chimney. Its bathroom door swung open into people&#8217;s seats. It was the sort of place where “when you walked in, everyone would stare at you,” according &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/how-sf-surfers-rescued-the-sundown-dive-bar-pitts-pub/">How SF surfers rescued the Sundown dive bar Pitt’s Pub</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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<p>For decades, Pittsburgh&#8217;s Pub was the Outer Sunset&#8217;s most notorious watering hole. </p>
<p>It opened at 8 am and stayed open until 2 am It had a fireplace without a chimney.  Its bathroom door swung open into people&#8217;s seats.  It was the sort of place where “when you walked in, everyone would stare at you,” according to general manager Jordan Mason, who first came to Pittsburgh&#8217;s to play pool when he moved to the neighborhood 12 years ago.</p>
<p>It was, in other words, a proper dive bar: grimy, unfriendly, a little rough.  “It looked bad.  It smelled bad,” said local surfer Matt Lopez, an Outer Sunset native who speaks with a laid-back California drawl.  “There was red in the walls.  There were multiple areas where you could see the daylight coming in.”  </p>
<p>Andy Olive, another local surfer, said that when he grew up in the area, his otherwise permissive parents warned him never to go to Pittsburgh&#8217;s. </p>
<p>But today, it&#8217;s a very different bar.  Lopez and Olive, its new co-owners, set out to rehab Pittsburgh&#8217;s without losing, in the process, some of the funk that always made it special.</p>
<p><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Co-owners Matt Lopez (left) and Andy Olive (right) flank general manager Jordan Mason.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Last spring, the two childhood friends reopened the bar.  It now officially goes by its longtime nickname, Pitt&#8217;s Pub, and it&#8217;s gotten a major cleanup.  Gone are the chimney-less fireplace, the weird green ceilings, the holes in the walls.  Pitt&#8217;s is now, to the shock of those who knew it in his previous life, the sort of place that has flower vases on every table.</p>
<p>Although it can probably no longer be categorized as a dive (the bathroom is too nice), Pitt&#8217;s 2.0 is certainly not fancy.  “Neighborhood bar,” maybe, is more like it.  The place is warm and welcoming — no one stars at newcomers anymore.  It serves $5 beers but can also make a great Manhattan. </p>
<p>On a given evening, it&#8217;s clear that Pitt&#8217;s is attracting a wide cross-section of the Sunset.  Aging hippies make small talk with Millennials at the bar.  Groups invite strangers to join them in a game of pool.  Smokers huddle together on the sidewalk outside.</p>
<p>To Lopez and Olive, this scene recaptures something of the San Francisco that they grew up in. “It used to be, you&#8217;d go out and mingle with other people,” Lopez said.  Nowadays, “people go to a bar with a group and stay with their group.”</p>
<p>&#8220;I want this to be a place where you don&#8217;t feel like you have to match a vibe,&#8221; Olive said.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/30/25/25/23156084/3/1200x0.jpg" alt="Bartender Ruari Horan makes a drink at Pitt's Pub."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Bartender Ruari Horan makes a drink at Pitt&#8217;s Pub.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>The bar at 4207 Judah St. has had several lives.  Once known as the Reef, then as Kelly&#8217;s Bar No Grill, it became Pittsburgh&#8217;s Pub in the late 1990s (named for the hometown of its then-owner, Dan Strickler, according to Lopez).  In the pantheon of Outer Sunset dive bars, Lopez and Olive considered Pittsburgh&#8217;s to be the diviest — besting Flanahan&#8217;s on Noriega and the Riptide on Taraval.  The bars got progressively nicer as you went south, they said.</p>
<p>Over time, as this stretch of Judah got swankier — welcoming destination spots such as Outerlands and Trouble Coffee — Pittsburgh&#8217;s was a remnant of the old Outer Sunset, a stubborn holdout against third-wave coffee culture and restaurants that drew two-hour waits.</p>
<p>Then, soon after the pandemic shutdowns began, Pittsburgh&#8217;s owner retired and sold the bar&#8217;s liquor license.  When Lopez, who also owns the upscale, craft cocktail bar White Cap on Taraval Street, heard that it was available, he jumped at the chance to bring it back.  He signed a lease and obtained a new liquor license.  The new one, incidentally, permits live entertainment, so Lopez is planning for DJ sets and small bands.</p>
<p>He asked Olive, a high school classmate and surfing buddy, to help him give the place a face lift.  It was a full demo, taking those walls down to the studs to get rid of the rot.  Pitt&#8217;s is now spiffed up, though it will still look recognizable to those who knew it before.  There&#8217;s still the same long bar, the pinball machines and a pool table.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/30/25/25/23156089/3/1200x0.jpg" alt="Alejandro Torres (left) and Marlo Torres at the new Pitt's Pub."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Alejandro Torres (left) and Marlo Torres at the new Pitt&#8217;s Pub.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Cleaning up a dive bar while retaining something of its character is a delicate act.  It&#8217;s been undertaken before: A similar story unfolded at the Richmond&#8217;s 540 Club, which a group of longtime regulars bought and reopened this year.  Like Pitt&#8217;s, the 540 is a lot cleaner than it used to be, but its dive-bar spirit remains intact.  The 500 Club, in the Mission, also got a new owner a couple years ago — native San Franciscan Ali Razavi — but still feels like itself.</p>
<p>Rather than converting these old, sometimes tired-feeling bars into something entirely new — into a high-end cocktail lounge, say — there appears to be a renewed appetite in San Francisco for preserving these institutions, keeping them easygoing and affordable.</p>
<p>By the time Lopez and Olive were ready to open their new Pitt&#8217;s, in April, they worried that the crowd might have wandered.  It had been closed for two years by then.  The sign was down, the windows boarded up. Surely the regulars had found new bars to be regulars at.</p>
<p>But on the first day, a stream of those regulars showed up, Lopez said, ready to greet their old haunt.  Since then, Pitt&#8217;s has been cultivating new sets of regulars, like a group of nurses who come in after their shift at the VA hospital, and another set of friends who went to high school together who gather here every Sunday afternoon.</p>
<p>On a recent weekday, I watched as a man entered, ordered half a beer (Mason said he happily accommodates strange requests like these and prorates the price), played a game of pinball, then left — all within a 15-minute span. He comes in and does that almost every day, Mason said.    </p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/30/25/25/23156085/3/1200x0.jpg" alt="A family looks into Pitt's Pub on Judah Street."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>A family looks into Pitt&#8217;s Pub on Judah Street.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Inside, you can feel Lopez and Olive&#8217;s nostalgia for the Outer Sunset of their youth.  The walls are lined with San Francisco memorabilia — historic shots of the Cliff House, the beach, the Golden Gate Bridge while under construction.  The ultimate nostalgic touch might be that groups of strangers here are actually mingling with each other.</p>
<p>Many customers are drinking those $5 Tecates.  Others have traded up for craft beers such as Russian River&#8217;s STS Pilsner or Alvarado Street&#8217;s Mai Tai IPA.  The draft cocktails ($12), which include an especially spicy, ginger-forward Moscow Mule, are popular, though the drink that Mason hopes will become Pitt&#8217;s signature — a very boozy Hurricane ($16) — is limited to two per person per night.</p>
<p>Is Pitt&#8217;s, like Outerlands and Trouble Coffee before it, becoming the Outer Sunset&#8217;s latest destination, drawing folks from all over the city to Judah&#8217;s chilly, windswept extremities?  maybe  But Mason suspects it&#8217;s more drawing out his own neighborhood, providing a gathering place that reaches more local residents than Pittsburgh&#8217;s did in the past.</p>
<p>The Outer Sunset tends to attract a self-selecting crowd, Mason said.  &#8220;We&#8217;re really at the edge of the world out here.&#8221; </p>
<p>Pitt&#8217;s Pub.  Open 3 pm-midnight Monday-Thursday, 3 pm-2 am Friday, 2 pm-2 am Saturday and noon-midnight Sunday.  4207 Judah St., San Francisco.  instagram.com/pittspub_sf</p>
<p class="cci_endnote_contact" title="CCI End Note Contact">Esther Mobley is The San Francisco Chronicle&#8217;s senior wine critic.  Email: emobley@sfchronicle.com</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/how-sf-surfers-rescued-the-sundown-dive-bar-pitts-pub/">How SF surfers rescued the Sundown dive bar Pitt’s Pub</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>Two-Spherical 2021 NFL Mock Draft: San Francisco picks Justin Fields, Kyle Pitts lands with Joe Burrow in Cincinnati &#124; NFL Draft</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Mar 2021 11:44:51 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=2280</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The San Francisco 49ers, after agreeing to a blockbuster trade-up, took a blowtorch to every 2021 NFL mock draft created beforehand. General manager John Lynch sent two future first-round picks and a 2022 third-round pick to the Miami Dolphins to swap their 2021 No. 12 overall pick for Miami’s No. 3 overall pick, all but &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/two-spherical-2021-nfl-mock-draft-san-francisco-picks-justin-fields-kyle-pitts-lands-with-joe-burrow-in-cincinnati-nfl-draft/">Two-Spherical 2021 NFL Mock Draft: San Francisco picks Justin Fields, Kyle Pitts lands with Joe Burrow in Cincinnati | NFL Draft</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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<p>The San Francisco 49ers, after agreeing to a blockbuster trade-up, took a blowtorch to every 2021 NFL mock draft created beforehand. General manager John Lynch sent two future first-round picks and a 2022 third-round pick to the Miami Dolphins to swap their 2021 No. 12 overall pick for Miami’s No. 3 overall pick, all but ensuring that head coach Kyle Shanahan will have a new rookie quarterback on his roster this upcoming season.</p>
<p>The Dolphins proceeded to trade a 2022 first-round pick, a 2021 fourth-round pick and the No. 12 selection in 2021 to the Philadelphia Eagles for the No. 6 pick and a fifth-rounder. Miami reenters the top-end wide receiver market (Ja’Marr Chase, Jaylen Waddle, DeVonta Smith) with the second trade, while Philly trades six draft order spots for a future first-rounder to help build around second-year signal-caller Jalen Hurts (for now).</p>
<p>Let’s stoke the flames a bit. Here’s a new two-round 2021 NFL mock draft with the above trades reflected in the draft order.</p>
<h5 style="text-align: center;"><strong>View PFF&#8217;s </strong>2021 NFL Draft position rankings:</h5>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>QB | RB | WR | TE | T | iOL | DI | EDGE | LB | CB | S</strong></p>
<h3>1. Jacksonville Jaguars — QB Trevor Lawrence, Clemson</h3>
<p class="p1">The flurry of trades this past Friday in no way impacts the Jaguars’ selection at No. 1 overall. Trevor Lawrence is the obvious choice for Urban Meyer and company — and that&#8217;s been the case since the team secured the No. 1 overall selection in December.<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></p>
<h3>2. New York Jets — QB Zach Wilson, BYU</h3>
<p>Multiple analysts have said the Jets are locking into former BYU quarterback Zach Wilson as the No. 2 overall pick in April. The Athletic’s Dane Brugler said an NFL scout texted him during BYU’s Pro Day on Friday: “Draft starts at 3. Wilson going 2.”</p>
<p>Fortunately for Jets fans, Wilson is the best-case scenario for the team. Betting on the elusive fourth-year breakout from Sam Darnold is not New York’s quickest path to relevance again. Wilson is PFF’s No. 2 overall player and quarterback in the 2021 NFL Draft and a much better prospect than Darnold was even before his career derailed into a series of “wow” throws on Twitter and helpless optimism.</p>
<p>PFF&#8217;s Mike Renner also recently compared Wilson and Ohio State’s Justin Fields in an article for PFF.com, in which he said:</p>
<p>“The only way I’d go Fields over Wilson is if I had an offensive coordinator who needed a rushing threat at the quarterback position. Otherwise, Fields&#8217; issues with holding onto the ball combined with Wilson’s elite off-platform ability and arm talent ultimately gives the BYU quarterback the nod.”</p>
<p>PFF’s Seth Galina also praised Wilson in his article comparing the former Cougars quarterback to another significant pre-draft riser in Joe Burrow, calling out Wilson’s notable arm talent as a key separator between the two prospects. And no quarterback in college football posted a higher grade than Wilson in 2020.</p>
<h3>3. San Francisco 49ers (via Miami Dolphins) — QB Justin Fields, Ohio State</h3>
<p>The 49ers didn’t trade two future first-round picks and a future third-round pick to give Jimmy Garoppolo another wide receiver or add to the secondary. With all signs pointing to Lawrence and Wilson being the first two players off the board, general manager John Lynch knew it was his time to strike and secure his next favorite quarterback prospect. And while there’s been some speculation that the 49ers will take either North Dakota State’s Trey Lance or even former Alabama quarterback Mac Jones, PFF’s pick at No. 3 overall would be Ohio State’s Justin Fields.</p>
<p>The concerns with Fields’ processing and his tendency to hold the ball too long in the pocket are valid, but the prospect of his development in those areas coupled with his proven athletic ability and accuracy should be too good for San Francisco to pass on. Fields is PFF’s No. 3 overall player and No. 3 quarterback prospect in the 2021 class. He’s also the only quarterback in this class with two years of 90.0-plus PFF grades (2019-20).</p>
<p>Frisco, Texas, USA; North Dakota State Bison quarterback Trey Lance (5) scores a touchdown in the fourth quarter against the James Madison Dukes at Toyota Stadium. Credit: Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports</p>
<h3>4. New England Patriots (via Atlanta Falcons) — QB Trey Lance, North Dakota State</h3>
<p>Bill Belichick didn’t spend north of $130 million in guaranteed money this offseason — the second-most of any NFL team in a single offseason in league history — to watch his Patriots play themselves into a worse pick in 2022 without their quarterback of the future on the roster. New England wore its checkbook thin knowing it can afford to do so with Cam Newton making backup money on a one-year deal and a rookie contract at the quarterback position pending.</p>
<p>Atlanta is pot-committed to Matt Ryan for two years after restructuring his contract during free agency. Per Over the Cap, the Falcons take on $65 million in dead money if Ryan is traded prior to June 1. And the team takes on $40.5 million in dead money if it trades him before June 1, 2022.</p>
<p>While it’s enticing to stay put at No. 4 and secure the best non-quarterback in the class, Atlanta would be foolish to not sell the pick to the highest bidder looking to come up for Lance or even Jones. Adding at least two future top-50 picks to move down 11 spots in this situation is better than any single non-quarterback selection at No. 4 overall, and that includes Kyle Pitts, Ja’Marr Chase, Penei Sewell, etc.</p>
<p>New England will need to give up a lot of draft capital to do it, but it doesn’t have much of a choice. The Patriots likely won’t be drafting in the top 15 again in the Belichick era, especially after improving as much as they did this offseason. They’re in a very similar spot as San Francisco in that both teams have too good of coaches to ever draft in the top five but also too middling of quarterbacks to ever go the full distance.</p>
<p>Get aggressive, bet on Belichick and add a cost-controlled rookie contract at quarterback to balance the free agency decisions and give the team a high-ceiling prospect at the most important position in football.</p>
<h3>5. Cincinnati Bengals — TE Kyle Pitts, Florida</h3>
<p>While there is a chance a team is desperate enough to inquire about the Bengals’ pick at No. 5 in an attempt to secure Mac Jones, I expect there to be a calmer market for the former ‘Bama quarterback’s services. And if that is the case and the team’s phone isn’t ringing with trade-down offers, Cincinnati should sprint the card in for Florida tight end Kyle Pitts.</p>
<p>Pitts and former Oregon offensive tackle Penei Sewell are similar in that they’re both arguably the best prospects we’ve seen at their respective positions in five-plus years. You can’t go wrong with either player at No. 5 overall, but the bigger impact in the wins column (and Joe Burrow’s development) comes with adding Pitts as a weapon for the offense than securing Sewell&#8217;s services as an upgrade over either former first-round pick Jonah Williams or newly signed veteran Riley Reiff.</p>
<p>Pitts can immediately be the Bengals’ top receiving option and a top-five tight end in the NFL as a rookie — he’s that good.</p>
<h3>6. Miami Dolphins (via Philadelphia Eagles) — WR Ja’Marr Chase, LSU</h3>
<p>I disagree with the value of trading a future first-round pick to move up just six spots and draft a wide receiver, but we’re playing with the cards Miami dealt. And while the content that would follow a Mac Jones selection at No. 6 for Miami would light the internet on fire, a near-lateral move at quarterback doesn’t feel close to as valuable as taking the class’ top receiver prospect in Chase.</p>
<p>The Dolphins need to do everything in their power to answer the pressing multi-million dollar question: Is Tua Tagovailoa the guy? Fitting him with as many weapons as possible is the fastest track to answering that.</p>
<p><strong>Related: </strong><strong>It&#8217;s too early to write off Tua Tagovailoa, but the Miami Dolphins should still draft a top quarterback</strong><strong> via Kevin Cole</strong></p>
<h3>7. Detroit Lions — OT Penei Sewell, Oregon</h3>
<p>I’d include a kneecap joke here if the bit wasn’t already played out in January. Plus, the better joke to be had is the sheer state of Detroit’s roster.</p>
<p>Dan Campbell’s Lions are one of Vegas’ favorites to pick No. 1 overall in 2022. With Jared Goff replacing Matthew Stafford and Kenny Golladay now suiting up for the New York Giants, Detroit&#8217;s offense is well on its way to being a bottom-five unit in the NFL this season. Give Spencer Rattler, Sam Howell, Kedon Slovis or the field a fighting chance in 2022 and add the best non-quarterback in this class.</p>
<h3>8. Carolina Panthers — QB Mac Jones, Alabama</h3>
<p>Carolina might have been the biggest loser of the 49ers-Dolphins trade. While the early offseason rumors were chock full of Panthers trade-up scenarios or Deshaun Watson jersey swaps, Friday’s trades and more than 15 civil lawsuits involving Watson have collectively blurred the Panthers’ future under center.</p>
<p>An in-division trade between Carolina and Atlanta is unlikely, even if the Panthers are willing to send the farm to come up to No. 4 overall. There’s still hope that one of the four best prospects makes it to Cincinnati at No. 5 overall, but the more likely scenario is the fifth-best quarterback in the class — which is Jones, in PFF’s opinion — still being on the board for Carolina at No. 8 to ultimately settle on.</p>
<p>Jones isn’t a clear-cut upgrade over current starter Teddy Bridgewater, but he’s not an obvious downgrade, either. Plus, he&#8217;ll come significantly cheaper. The Panthers can afford to spend big in free agency once Bridgewater&#8217;s contract is off the books in hopes of building a supporting cast good enough for Jones to win with in the NFL.</p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" src="https://anchor.fm/2-for-1-drafts/embed/episodes/Ep--171-Three-Round-Mock-Draft--Offensive-Line-Class-Overview--Interviews-with-Tre-Walker--Christian-Uphoff-etdma6/a-a51pfrt" width="100%" height="102px" frameborder="0" scrolling="no"><span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start">﻿</span></iframe></p>
<h3>9. Denver Broncos — LB Micah Parsons, Penn State</h3>
<p class="p1">The Broncos&#8217; biggest need is quarterback, but if Carolina and New England target signal-callers early in the draft, it&#8217;s likely five will have come off the board before Denver&#8217;s selection at No. 9 overall. Vic Fangio and company would have no choice but to enter the 2021 season with Drew Lock as the starter and take the best player available in the first round.</p>
<p class="p1">Fangio can get the best out of Parsons at the next level and should put him in a position to make an immediate impact at off-ball linebacker.</p>
<h3>10. Dallas Cowboys — CB Patrick Surtain II, Alabama</h3>
<p>Patrick Surtain II likely solidified his spot as the top cornerback to come off the board in the 2021 NFL Draft with his Pro Day. His 87.0 PFF grade in 2020 also led all college cornerbacks with at least 400 defensive snaps.</p>
<h3>11. New York Giants — WR Devonta Smith, Alabama</h3>
<p>DeVonta Smith&#8217;s reported weight (170 pounds) shouldn&#8217;t keep the Giants from pulling the trigger on the Heisman Trophy winner if he falls into their laps at No. 11 overall. And while the team did just break the bank for former Detroit Lions receiver Kenny Golladay, Smith is an instant upgrade over Darius Slayton or Sterling Shepard — one who will benefit from playing a rotational role split between the outside and the slot.</p>
<p>Similar to Miami&#8217;s situation with Tua Tagovailoa, New York needs to do everything it can to see if Daniel Jones can be “the guy” for the franchise before making the decision to either move on from him or offer an extension. Adding Smith is a step in that direction.</p>
<h3>12. Philadelphia Eagles (via Miami Dolphins via San Francisco 49ers) — CB Jaycee Horn, South Carolina</h3>
<p>Horn&#8217;s combination of athleticism and physicality is rare for the cornerback position. He allowed just eight catches on 24 targets for 116 yards in the seven games he played in 2020.</p>
<h3>13. Los Angeles Chargers — OT Rashawn Slater, Northwestern</h3>
<p>A former three-star recruit, Slater earned 75.0 and 76.6 PFF grades playing right tackle for Northwestern as a true freshman and sophomore in 2017 and 2018, respectively. His PFF grade jumped to 90.0 in his first season starting at left tackle for the Wildcats in 2019. He immediately fills a need for the Chargers, regardless of whether he plays tackle or interior offensive line at the next level.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-360241" src="https://media.pff.com/2021/02/USATSI_13640615_168392721_lowres.jpg" alt="" width="1500" height="1000" srcset="https://media.pff.com/2021/02/USATSI_13640615_168392721_lowres.jpg 1500w, https://media.pff.com/2021/02/USATSI_13640615_168392721_lowres-300x200.jpg 300w, https://media.pff.com/2021/02/USATSI_13640615_168392721_lowres-768x512.jpg 768w, https://media.pff.com/2021/02/USATSI_13640615_168392721_lowres-1024x683.jpg 1024w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 706px) 89vw, (max-width: 767px) 82vw, 740px"/>College Park, MD, USA; Michigan Wolverines defensive lineman Kwity Paye (19) and linebacker Jordan Glasgow (29) prior to the snap against the Maryland Terrapins at Capital One Field at Maryland Stadium. Credit: Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports</p>
<h3>14. Minnesota Vikings — Edge Kwity Paye, Michigan</h3>
<p>Paye is a rare athlete who won’t last deep into the first round if he tests as well as expected at the 2021 NFL scouting combine. He also produced the fourth-best PFF pass-rush win rate (26%) of any Power Five edge defender in the country in 2020.</p>
<h3>15. Atlanta Falcons (via New England Patriots) — WR Jaylen Waddle, Alabama</h3>
<p>Waddle is arguably a better receiver prospect than Henry Ruggs III was coming out of Alabama in 2020. An explosive, dynamic athlete, Waddle ranks inside the top five in yards per route run (3.64) and yards after the catch per reception (11.5) over the past two seasons. Adding him to play inside and split outside reps with Julio Jones and Calvin Ridley would give Matt Ryan every reason to lead a top-flight offense in 2021.</p>
<h3>16. Arizona Cardinals — Edge Jaelan Phillips, Miami (Fla.)</h3>
<p>Jaelan Phillips was regarded as the No. 1 overall recruit by the 247Sports Composite coming out of Redlands East Valley High School. He racked up 218 tackles, 30.5 sacks and two interceptions in his junior and senior seasons combined en route to being tagged as a five-star recruit.</p>
<p>However, Phillips suffered three severe concussions early in his UCLA career that led to him retiring from football ahead of the 2019 season. He eventually returned to the game to play for Miami (Fla.) in 2020 and turned in one of the better seasons of any pass-rusher in the country. The concussion concerns will drive all of the conversation surrounding Phillips, but there&#8217;s no arguing he&#8217;s one of the most purely talented defensive prospects in the class.</p>
<h3>17. Las Vegas Raiders — OT Christan Darrisaw, Virginia Tech</h3>
<p>Darrisaw was one of the bigger college football breakouts in 2020. A former three-star recruit out of Maryland, he improved his grade from 68.6 starting at left tackle in 2018 up to 95.6 playing the same position in 2020. The 6-foot-5, 350-pounder earned himself some money this season, for sure.</p>
<h3>18. Miami Dolphins — Edge Jayson Oweh, Penn State</h3>
<p>One of several developmental edge prospects in this class, Oweh is athletic and bendy for the position but lacks high-end college production. He earned just an 81.8 PFF pass-rushing grade in 2019 and an 80.3 PFF pass-rushing grade in 2020. However, he is a project worth investing in the back end of the first round for a Titans team in desperate need of some juice along the edge.</p>
<h3>19. Washington Football Team — OT Teven Jenkins, Oklahoma State</h3>
<p>Jenkins improved his PFF grade in each of his past three seasons at Oklahoma State, working all the way up to 92.0 in 2020. He is a road grader in the run game and a brick wall against bull-rush types in pass protection. Turn on his tape against Texas&#8217; Joseph Ossai, and you&#8217;ll quickly understand the hype.</p>
<h3>20. Chicago Bears — Edge Azeez Ojulari, Georgia</h3>
<p>Ojulari is the best pure speed rusher in the 2021 class and should pick up wins along the outside edge early in his NFL career. The former Georgia standout has freaky explosiveness and the bend to turn the corner and finish at the quarterback. He earned a 91.7 pass-rushing grade that ranked second among all FBS edge defenders in 2020.</p>
<h3>21. Indianapolis Colts — WR Rashod Bateman, Minnesota</h3>
<p>Bateman isn&#8217;t a freak athlete with high-end top speed, but he&#8217;s still one of the best pure separators in this class because of his ability to get off the line of scrimmage and win with efficient route-running. The former Minnesota standout led the country in yards per route from an outside alignment as a sophomore in 2019.</p>
<h3>22. Tennessee Titans — WR Elijah Moore, Ole Miss</h3>
<p>Losing Corey Davis and Jonnu Smith in the same offseason should put Tennessee in a prime position to target a wide receiver at No. 22 overall, and Elijah Moore would be a huge value for Ryan Tannehill and company. Moore was one of the most productive receivers in the country for Lane Kiffin at Ole Miss, finishing the 2020 season with the third-highest PFF receiving grade in the country (92.4).</p>
<h3>23. New York Jets (via Seattle Seahawks) — CB Greg Newsome II, Northwestern</h3>
<p>Northwestern&#8217;s Greg Newsome II is a perfect fit for Robert Saleh&#8217;s zone-heavy defense. He has great click-and-close ability along with high-end balls skills that should translate to early production in New York.</p>
<h3>24. Pittsburgh Steelers — Edge Gregory Rousseau, Miami (Fla)</h3>
<p>Rousseau is far from a polished prospect, but the former Miami defender is a high-end athlete with ridiculous size and length for the position (6-foot-6, 260 pounds). He earned a 76.2 PFF grade playing up and down the line of scrimmage for the Hurricanes in 2019 and can immediately step in as a chess piece in Pittsburgh&#8217;s defense while he develops his pass-rushing skill set.</p>
<h3>25. Jacksonville Jaguars (via Los Angeles Rams) — S Tre’von Moehrig, TCU</h3>
<p>The Jaguars need to continue to invest draft capital in the secondary. Sidney Jones is the only Jacksonville defender with 100-plus snaps at outside cornerback and a PFF grade above 61.0. Rookie C.J. Henderson should continue to get better with experience as long as he can stay healthy, but the rest of the depth chart is a bit of a mess.</p>
<p>Moehrig (6-foot-2, 202 pounds) is the best free safety prospect in the 2021 class and should be coveted for his physical tools and ball production come April&#8217;s draft.</p>
<h3>26. Cleveland Browns — DI Christian Barmore, Alabama</h3>
<p>Barmore&#8217;s consistency at Alabama is one reason to be concerned about him as a high-end prospect, but his performances in the Crimson Tide&#8217;s bouts with Notre Dame and Ohio State in the College Football Playoff are some of the best we&#8217;ve seen from any defensive tackle in this class.</p>
<p>Buying into the high end and continuing to develop Barmore (RS So.) at the next level is a worthwhile investment for the Browns at No. 26, especially knowing the lack of depth in the 2021 defensive tackle class.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-347237" src="https://media.pff.com/2020/11/USATSI_15049506_168392742_lowres.jpg" alt="" width="1805" height="1203" srcset="https://media.pff.com/2020/11/USATSI_15049506_168392742_lowres.jpg 1805w, https://media.pff.com/2020/11/USATSI_15049506_168392742_lowres-300x200.jpg 300w, https://media.pff.com/2020/11/USATSI_15049506_168392742_lowres-768x512.jpg 768w, https://media.pff.com/2020/11/USATSI_15049506_168392742_lowres-1024x682.jpg 1024w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 706px) 89vw, (max-width: 767px) 82vw, 740px"/>Columbia, Missouri, USA; LSU Tigers wide receiver Terrace Marshall Jr. (6) runs against Missouri Tigers safety Martez Manuel (3) during the second half at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium. Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports</p>
<h3>27. Baltimore Ravens — WR Terrace Marshall Jr., LSU</h3>
<p>Terrace Marshall Jr. is a big-bodied wide receiver who can play in the slot or on the outside at the next level. He can immediately be what the Ravens hoped Miles Boykin would develop into over the past two seasons.</p>
<h3>28. New Orleans Saints — CB Caleb Farley, Virginia Tech</h3>
<p>Currently PFF’s top-ranked cornerback and No. 14 overall player in the 2021 class, Farley is a fluid athlete with all the tools necessary to dominate at outside cornerback in the NFL. Before opting out of the 2020 season and declaring for the draft, the 6-foot-2, 207-pounder earned a 90.5 PFF coverage grade that ranked third among Power Five cornerbacks in 2019.</p>
<p>While Farley could very well be the best cornerback to come out of the 2021 class, concerns with his back injury and his sheer lack of experience at outside cornerback could lead to him being available for the Saints at No. 28.</p>
<h3>29. Green Bay Packers — LB Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, Notre Dame</h3>
<p>An elite athlete with some of the best pure explosiveness in the class, Owusu-Koramoah can quickly become one of the league&#8217;s best coverage linebackers if he continues to develop at the position. He excelled in coverage while playing the bulk of his snaps split between the box and slot cornerback positions.</p>
<h3>30. Buffalo Bills — OT Dillon Radunz, North Dakota State</h3>
<p>Radunz is a big riser up draft boards coming off his stellar performance at the 2021 Reese&#8217;s Senior Bowl. He also earned 79.1 and 87.2 pass-blocking grades in his 2018 and 2019 seasons, respectively. The Bills already have starters at both left and right tackle in Daryl Williams and Dion Dawkins, but getting younger and cheaper at a premium position while adding depth is a good use of draft capital for a team with few holes and a soon-to-be highly paid quarterback.</p>
<h3>31. Kansas City Chiefs — OT Sam Cosmi, Texas</h3>
<p>One of the better athletes at his position, the 6-foot-7, 309-pound Cosmi earned 82.0-plus PFF pass-blocking grades in all three of his years at Texas. He also posted a 90.5 PFF overall grade in 2020.</p>
<h3>32. Tampa Bay Buccaneers — OT Walker Little, Stanford</h3>
<p>Walker Little would be coveted as one of the best players in this class if he didn&#8217;t miss nearly all of the 2019 season and opt out of the 2020 season. He&#8217;s a former five-star recruit with ridiculous athleticism for his size. Tristan Wirfs was a home run for the Bucs a year ago, and Little could be exactly that as a developmental piece behind Donovan Smith while the veteran plays out the rest of his contract.</p>
<h5>Round 2</h5>
<h3>33. Jacksonville Jaguars — CB Asante Samuel Jr., Florida State</h3>
<h3>34. New York Jets — OT/OG Alijah Vera-Tucker, USC</h3>
<h3>35. Atlanta Falcons — Edge Carlos Basham Jr., Wake Forest</h3>
<h3>36. Miami Dolphins (via Houston Texans) — LB Zaven Collins, Tulsa</h3>
<h3>37. Philadelphia Eagles — WR Rondale Moore, Purdue</h3>
<h3>38. Cincinnati Bengals — OT Alex Leatherwood, Alabama</h3>
<h3>39. Miami Dolphins (via Carolina Panthers) — OG Wyatt Davis, Ohio State</h3>
<h3>40. Denver Broncos — OT/OG Jackson Carman, Clemson</h3>
<h3>41. Detroit Lions — LB Nick Bolton, Missouri</h3>
<h3>42. New York Giants — C Landon Dickerson, Alabama</h3>
<h3>43. San Francisco 49ers — LB Jabril Cox, LSU</h3>
<h3>44. Dallas Cowboys — DI Alim McNeill, NC State</h3>
<h3>45. Jacksonville Jaguars (via Minnesota Vikings) — WR Dyami Brown, UNC</h3>
<h3>46. Atlanta Falcons (via New England Patriots) — CB/S Elijah Molden, Washington</h3>
<h3>47. Los Angeles Chargers — CB Tyson Campbell, Georgia</h3>
<h3>48. Las Vegas Raiders — S Richie Grant, UCF</h3>
<h3>49. Arizona Cardinals — RB Travis Etienne, Clemson</h3>
<h3>50. Miami Dolphins — Edge Ronnie Perkins, Oklahoma</h3>
<h3>51. Washington Football Team — OT Liam Eichenberg, Notre Dame</h3>
<h3>52. Chicago Bears — CB Aaron Robinson, UCF</h3>
<h3>53. Tennessee Titans — CB Ifeatu Melifonwu, Syracuse</h3>
<h3>54. Indianapolis Colts — S Jevon Holland, Oregon</h3>
<h3>55. Pittsburgh Steelers — Edge Payton Turner, Houston</h3>
<h3>56. Seattle Seahawks — CB Eric Stokes, Georgia</h3>
<h3>57. Los Angeles Rams — OT/G Jalen Mayfield, Michigan</h3>
<h3>58. Baltimore Ravens — Edge Rashad Weaver, Pittsburgh</h3>
<h3>59. Cleveland Browns — LB Jamin Davis, Kentucky</h3>
<h3>60. New Orleans Saints — Edge/LB Justin Hilliard, Ohio State</h3>
<h3>61. Buffalo Bills — Edge Joseph Ossai, Texas</h3>
<h3>62. Green Bay Packers — DI Levi Onwuzurike, Washington</h3>
<h3>63. Kansas City Chiefs — DI Marvin Wilson, Florida State</h3>
<h3>64. Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Edge Joe Tryon, Washington</h3>
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