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[Video] - Biden's clean energy plan would be disastrous for Houston, GOP congressional nominee says

[Video] - Biden's clean energy plan would be disastrous for Houston, GOP congressional nominee says submitted by AutoNewsAdmin to FOXauto [link] [comments]

[Business] - FERC pushes back against state clean energy plans | Houston Chronicle

[Business] - FERC pushes back against state clean energy plans | Houston Chronicle submitted by AutoNewspaperAdmin to AutoNewspaper [link] [comments]

Houston job losses surpass losses of 2009 recession

Houston job losses surpass losses of 2009 recession submitted by ProctorEldritch to houston [link] [comments]

Houston startup plans to store wind energy underground - "The company plans to use electricity at night, when it's cheap, to compress air into an underground cavern. The company then releases the air through turbines to generate electricity when the price is right."

Houston startup plans to store wind energy underground - submitted by mvea to Futurology [link] [comments]

Houston startup plans to store wind energy underground - "The company plans to use electricity at night, when it's cheap, to compress air into an underground cavern. The company then releases the air through turbines to generate electricity when the price is right."

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Electricity Rates in Houston - Compare Cheapest Energy Plans

Electricity Rates in Houston - Compare Cheapest Energy Plans submitted by energyplans to u/energyplans [link] [comments]

Devon Energy Closing Houston Office, Plan To Consolidate in Oklahoma City, OK

Devon Energy Closing Houston Office, Plan To Consolidate in Oklahoma City, OK submitted by hulashakes to houston [link] [comments]

Total to develop 4 solar projects near Houston, expanding renewable footprint

Total to develop 4 solar projects near Houston, expanding renewable footprint submitted by LostSoul5 to houston [link] [comments]

Restructuring Plans Underway At Two Houston-Based Energy Suppliers

Restructuring Plans Underway At Two Houston-Based Energy Suppliers submitted by zsreport to houston [link] [comments]

@NASA: NOW AVAILABLE: An e-book that offers an inside look at the time and energy our flight control teams in Houston devote to the development, planning and integration of a mission. Download it at https://t.co/7j7szYZKc6. https://t.co/IORBPPgcDl

@NASA: NOW AVAILABLE: An e-book that offers an inside look at the time and energy our flight control teams in Houston devote to the development, planning and integration of a mission. Download it at https://t.co/7j7szYZKc6. https://t.co/IORBPPgcDl submitted by -en- to newsbotbot [link] [comments]

[Business] - GOP tax plan picks energy industry winners and losers | Houston Chronicle

[Business] - GOP tax plan picks energy industry winners and losers | Houston Chronicle submitted by AutoNewspaperAdmin to AutoNewspaper [link] [comments]

Houston startup plans to store wind energy underground - "The company plans to use electricity at night, when it's cheap, to compress air into an underground cavern. The company then releases the air through turbines to generate electricity when the price is right."

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 78%. (I'm a bot)
Texans have long stored oil, natural gas and other forms of energy in underground salt caverns, so it's only natural that a Houston startup wants to store wind energy there, too.
The company plans to use electricity at night, when it's cheap, to compress air into an underground cavern.
Texas' wholesale electricity market and huge nightly wind resource make compressed air energy storage viable, said Jack Farley, CEO of Apex-CAES. Build enough compressed air energy storage, and Texas would never have to burn coal again, and consumers would enjoy even lower electricity prices, he told me.
The big opportunity for energy storage companies, whether they use batteries, compressed air or hydroelectric dams, is to keep the electric grid balanced as people turn appliances on and off and while generators ramp up and shut down.
While compressed air energy can't compete with low-priced natural gas or wind in the bulk electricity market, it can compete to offer reliable ancillary services.
The only thing preventing Texas from building more wind, solar and compressed air energy storage is the low price of natural gas.
Summary Source | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: air#1 energy#2 electricity#3 natural#4 compress#5
Post found in /Futurology and /technology.
NOTICE: This thread is for discussing the submission topic. Please do not discuss the concept of the autotldr bot here.
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Houston startup plans to store wind energy underground - "The company plans to use electricity at night, when it's cheap, to compress air into an underground cavern. The company then releases the air through turbines to generate electricity when the price is right."

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[National] - Trump's plan to cut basic energy research finds an unlikely opponent: oil executives | Houston Chronicle

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NY Jets Discord 3 Round Mock

Hello,
We did a pre-FA mock draft in the Jets discord with 32 members GMing for the various teams. Some of the GMs provided explanations below on their thought process for the picks. Sheets link
1) Jacksonville (Gmoney): QB Trevor Lawrence, Clemson #16
I pick Trevor because we needed a qb and Trevor is a generational talented qb
 
2) NY Jets (stackingdollars): QB Zach Wilson, BYU #1
Both Fields and Wilson have great qualities but I think Wilson has the edge. The biggest advantage Wilson has is his anticipation. I think he would fit very well in the LaFleur offense and can become a franchise QB with the Jets.
 
TRADE: Miami gives 1.03 (3), Carolina gives 1.08 (8), 3.09 (73), 2022 CAR 1st
3) Carolina (cantstopthis): QB Justin Fields, OSU #1
Justin Fields is a highly talented prospect with all the tools to become a franchise guy. In Carolina, he can sit behind Teddy B and work with elite skill position players to truly hone in the skills to allow him to reach his full potential. Moving ahead of Atlanta was important because it allowed me to secure one of the top QBs in the class. Moving a future first and a third this year felt like great value because I was able to snag a QB I believe has elite potential in the nfl, while maintaining seconds which I can use to build around Fields.
 
4) Atlanta (jorjor): T Penei Sewell, Oregon #58
A very good tackle who I think is bpa rn. I don’t feel good taking Lance this early so I took the best player at the pick.
 
5) Cincinnati (Sliz): T Rashawn Slater, Northwestern #70
This is the worst case for Cinci, and they'll be kicking themselves for a meaningless late season win over Houston. OT1 Sewell was off the board, as were the top 3 QBs that could fetch decent tradeback value. While Chase has been a common mock, I think a Higgins/Boyd duo is easily complimented without spending this much capital to address it. With no trade back partner, Slater (OT1 on some boards) is a nice consolation. Slater will slot in as an immediate starter at tackle with versatility to slot inside should CIN address the tackle spot opposite Jonah Williams in FA.
 
6) Philadelphia (Salty): WR Ja’Marr Chase, LSU #1
The Eagles are light in the weapons department. They haven't have a reliable receiver in years, and the negatives of that have shown their face the past 2 years, with Carson Wentz and Jalen Hurts struggling at times to move the ball because of the lack of Receivers. Justin Fields was off the board at 6 and I feel like Wentz or Hurts paired with such a dominant prospect at Receiver could work wonders. Chase is a unique blend of size, speed, and talent at the WR position. He has solid size at 6 foot and a bit over 200 pounds, with sure hands and really good route running. His 2019 season at LSU was incredible and he produced one of the best WR seasons of all time at the collegiate level. I have no doubt with his abilities that he will immediately be able to put up good numbers and improve the offense and passing game, giving the eagles a much needed extra dimension to their offense.
 
TRADE: Detroit gives 1.07 (7), 3.25 (89), San Francisco gives 1.12 (12), 2.11 (43)
7) San Francisco (Anc): QB Trey Lance, NDSU #5
Kyle Shanahan is too good of a coach to keep languishing with a mediocre Jimmy G who is only okay when he can stay healthy. Trey Lance is a boom/bust prospect with a TON of upside and a big learning curve. In this scenario, he has the opportunity to either sit and learn with a capable bridge QB, OR if Shanahan chooses kick start his career in the best system in the league at empowering QBs to be successful. Lance joins a loaded team that, despite having some deficiencies in the IOL and a few pieces potentially leaving in FA on the defense, is ready to compete for the division right now and can afford moving down in round 2 to try and secure the future face of the franchise at QB. If he works out, the Niners get to have the type of athletic and dynamic QB under center that Shanahan has never had.
 
8) Miami (tolgzz): WR DeVonta Smith, Alabama #8
Bringing Tua a much needed weapon and ex teammate.
 
9) Denver (paxton): CB Caleb Farley, Virginia #3
At this position with no QBs in consideration, I chose to address Denver's most obvious need, CB. Farley has an almost impossible blend of physical traits. Size, speed, fluidity. Farley to me projects as a shutdown corner who plays on WR1s on the outside. In a division with Tyreek Hill, Henry Ruggs and Keenan Allen, he's a perfect fit. While Surtain was in consideration, I dont think he can match the traits and athleticism and will struggle against speedy receivers in the AFC West. Farley's ceiling is too high to pass on here.
 
10) Dallas (spencerw): CB Patrick Surtain II, Alabama #2
With a depleted DB core and 6 S/CBs entering FA, CB is the biggest need for the Dallas Cowboys. Going for Surtain, a corner whose best fit is an outside man-coverage CB is a huge upgrade and can be a day 1 starter on the outside for the Cowboys. Surtain's length and athleticism creates a lock-down potential that can be extremely helpful for a defense lacking talent across all three levels.
 
TRADE: NY Giants give 1.11 (11), New Orleans gives 1.28 (28), 2022 NOR 1st
11) New Orleans (Misery): LB Micah Parsons, Penn St #11
 
12) Detroit (Zingy): T Christian Darrisaw, Virginia Tech #77
Detroit sucks, OT is the second most valuable position in the NFL, Darrisaw will be a really really good tackle in the NFL and has experience playing in the scheme Goff has played in his entire career. One of the first building blocks that will actually be on this team when they get a real QB in a year or two. Okudah and Darrisaw might be the only 2 on the roster in 5 years.
 
13) LA Chargers (run1609): CB Jaycee Horn, South Carolina #1
The Chargers have a pressing need at CB with Michael Davis entering free agency (I expect him to be retained) and CHJ/Casey Heyward on the wrong side of 30. He profiles as a lockdown man CB who new HC Brandon Staley hopes can approximate the role Jalen Ramsey played for him across town with the Rams.
 
TRADE: Minnesota gives 1.14 (14), 3.27 (91), Arizona gives 1.16 (16), 3.16 (80), 2022 ARI 2nd
14) Arizona (Brodie): TE Kyle Pitts, Florida #84
 
TRADE: New England gives 1.15 (15), 3.33 (97), 7.15 (241), Tampa Bay gives 1.31 (31), 2.31 (63), 3.31 (95), 2022 TAM 2nd
15) Tampa Bay (rgoing): EDGE Gregory Rousseau, Miami #15
Tampa is a perfect spot for GR. He can learn behind JPP and Barrett for a year or so and get more refined as a pass rusher. Rousseau is someone who I believe can play all across the DLIne and won’t have any pressure to start right away. At only 20 years old and equipped with excellent measurables and a high motor, the sky is the limit for him.
 
16) Minnesota (beezus): EDGE Kwity Paye, Michigan #19
With darrisaw and horn coming off the board at 12 and 13, the Vikings sought a trade back knowing there would be suitors hungry for one of waddle/pitts. The cardinals called and offered 1.16 and a 2022 2nd for the pick. We countered, adding in a pick swap of 91 and 80. Arizona obliged and it was a done deal.
At 16, it came down to paye, AVT, and Christian barmore. After seeing a trade with the football team fall through, the Vikings took the toolsy edge rusher from Michigan. Kwity Paye has the athletic tools and the build to become an elite pass rusher. His ceiling combined with Minnesota’s pedigree of developing defensive talent is a recipe for success for the Vikings.
 
17) Las Vegas (jmah): IDL Christian Barmore, Alabama #58
I’ve only watched Christian Barmore in the national championship game, but he should really help the Raiders trash defense.
 
18) Miami (tolgzz): LB Zaven Collins, Tulsa #23
With this pick Dolphins bring in a LB they plan to start from day 1. Collins brings with him size and power combined with his athleticism. He can defend the run, play the pass in coverage and even be used to rush the QB. Collins fills a spot of need for Dolphins and hopefully turns into a stud LB for them for years to come
 
19) Washington (klondike): QB Mac Jones, Alabama #10
Good fit. Lots of talent and running plays out of the backfield. Smart player, good game manager. Ideal fit for both parties. He can sit behind Alex Smith for however long.
 
20) Chicago (Mayor): WR Jaylen Waddle, Alabama #17
With the Bears offense being eternally awful, Allen Robinson looking like a goner more and more and rookie WRs more frequently making plays fresh out of college picking up Waddle will hopefully jump start this offense with whatever vet QB the bears roll with in 2021
 
21) Indianapolis (Viddstuff): T Sam Cosmi, Texas #52
While the colts are lacking all over at offense, Costanzo retiring really put them in a tough spot. I could have gone WR here, but the colts offense can get creative with their weapons, and it was too early to overdraft the QB on the board. Cosmi would fit in well on the blindside and protect whoever starts at QB for a long time.
 
22) Tennessee (botlane): EDGE Azeez Ojulari, Georgia #13
Azeez Ojulari is an attempt to fix one of the biggest voids in the Tennessee Titans defense, the pass rush. Ojulari has a great get-off, a mixture of speed, bend and power which makes his kit very powerful to take even the most agile lineman off of their game. A great athlete with tremendous upside, Ojulari's explosion off the line is marvelous, paired with a great jab/stab, he is able to create space with his length. If you don't jam him at the line and initiate contact, he's got a solid enough technique that pairs with his athleticism. Ojulari has the intangibles to be a great pass-rusher in this league and if he keeps developing, that's right where he's headed.
 
23) NY Jets (stackingdollars): WR Rashod Bateman, Minnesota #0
Entering this off-season the Jets are in need of a WR. Bateman has tremendous route running ability and great hands. Pairing this pick with QB Zach Wilson will help give the Jets offense the spark they are looking for.
 
24) Pittsburgh (Fireblast): QB Kyle Trask, Florida #11
Although this might be a bit of a reach, Steelers desperately need a qb and neither big benor dwayne haskins is it. The plan here would be to sign a FA guy, let trask sit behind him for a year, and then he takes the reigns. Trask with the right devolopment can probably be at least a decent enough starter I'd guess, not near where ben was in his prime, but very qbs are that good.
 
25) Jacksonville (Gmoney): T Alex Leatherwood, Alabama #70
 
TRADE: Cleveland gives 1.26 (26), Green Bay gives 1.29 (29), 3.29 (93)
26) Green Bay (herb): CB Asante Samuel Jr, FSU #13
So my reasoning for picking Samuel is the packers need someone to pair up with Jaire Alexander, Samuel was the best choice available and he can really bring a much needed CB2 to Green Bay.
 
27) Baltimore (oman): EDGE Jayson Oweh, Penn St #28
Ravens have Judon and McPhee hitting the open market, thus opening some obvious holes. I was looking WR initially but given how the draft played out so far I liked the edge options more. I like his athletic ability in Winks scheme and he should be a good fit.
 
28) NY Giants (rubbersoul): WR Rondale Moore, Purdue #4
 
29) Cleveland (Huntington): EDGE Joe Tryon, Washington #9
Tryon is a tall, big, athletic edge who can play standing up or can be a traditional 4-3 DE. He can both drop back in coverage or rush the passer. He’s a 3-down player who can grow and complement Garrett. A very productive 2019 overshadowed by his opting out in 2020. Tryon is a high energy player with the size to defend the run though its an area he needs to improve. With Vernon both injured a free agent, Tryon will have a chance to start immediately.
 
30) Buffalo (AntRob): RB Najee Harris, Alabama #22
The Bills completely abandoned the run for large portions of last year and basically told Josh Allen to go win games by himself. The Bills need some juice in the backfield, I don't have confidence in Singletary or Moss being that guy for them, as evidenced by Daboll's playcalling.
Harris is the most well rounded back in this class and checks every box for me. What makes him valuable in addition to his frame and run + catch ability is his elusivity (wiggle...light, nimble feet) and his power. The blending of all these things together gives you a really upper class RB prospect that will finally be able to bring the Bills offense some multiplicity and balance in scheme.
 
31 New England (rgoing): LB Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, Notre Dame #6
The patriots fielded calls at the 15th spot, although there are questions surrounding the Quarterback position, New England ultimately felt a trade back with the Buccaneers was to the 31st pick was the best move.
New England does not draft for need in the first round, they draft for best available player. The Patriots drafted Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah out of the University of Notre Dame with the 31st pick. Although JOK is listed as a linebacker, New England isn't going to just utilize his talents there. JOK is the new breed of defender, his ability and versatility allows him to play different roles on defense the perfect type of player for the patriots.
 
TRADE: Kansas City gives 1.32 (32), Cincinnati gives 2.06 (38), 4.06 (110), 7.05 (231)
32) Cincinnati (Sliz): IOL Alijah Vera-Tucker
No matter what they do in FA, the value was too good to pass up here. With OL needy teams (MIA, NYJ) sitting ahead of the Bengals this trade up felt necessary to lock up a top guy. A 4th and a 7th (Bengals got a 7th back in the Dunlap trade) was a cheap price to pay to get there, while also picking up the 5th year option.
AVT projects as a solid OG that should be a consistent starter on an IOL that desperately needs a long-term piece. I feel AVT's an insanely safe pick to be productive, putting him a tier above the next group of guys each with their own question marks (medical or otherwise). Paired with Slater in rd 1 and a healthy Jonah Williams, CIN now has several young cornerstone pieces to protect and grow with Joe Burrow and open lanes for Mixon. AVT has positional versatility, allowing the Bengals the chance to let guys compete for multiple spots and see what lineup works the best. This is a make or break year for Taylor. This is a franchise that needs to protect the future in Joe Burrow. Double dipping at OL helps both those facets.
 
33) Jacksonville (Gmoney): S Trevon Moehrig, TCU #7
 
34) NY Jets (stackingdollars): IOL Creed Humphrey, Oklahoma #56
NYJ’s OL was a huge improvement from 2019 but it still needs work especially in the middle. Creed offers versatility and a long term option at center. Connor McGovern would be able to play OG as he has experience there, or Creed can play OG as he has taken some snaps there during the senior bowl. Creed has quick hands and good size and can bring stability on the OL for years to come.
 
35) Atlanta (jorjor): CB Tyson Campbell, Georgia #3
 
36) Miami (tolgzz): S Andre Cisco, Syracuse #7
 
TRADES: Philadelphia gives 2.05 (37), Denver gives 2.08 (40), 4.09 (115), 2022 DEN 6th
37) Denver (Paxton): WR Kadarius Toney, Florida #1
I was shocked Toney fell this low, and after having tried to trade up multiple times before, I was finally able to make it work. I felt I needed to jump the chiefs so some might say I overpaid, but hey. Toney was IMO BPA, his evasiveness is unmatched in this class and he is a willing contested catcher. Toney is a perfect fit alongside Jeudy, Sutton and Hamler and will provide the Broncos with a true "weapon". While WR isnt close to the broncos most pressing need, this pick makes the broncos offence a lethal force.
 
38) Kansas City (teutonic): G Jalen Mayfield, Michigan #73
I tried trading up for the falling JOK but had no takers on my trade offers and when it got to my pick I felt comfortable with enough options that I elected to trade back for an extra 4th and 7th. Mayfield is a big man who I think will slot into a guard position at the next level, he's extremely strong and fits a need on the OL.  
TRADES: Carolina gives 2.07 (39), 2022 CAR 5th, Chicago gives 2.20 (52), 3.20 (84), 2022 CHI 4th
39) Chicago (Mayor): IOL Wyatt Davis, Ohio St #52
 
40) Philadelphia (Salty): EDGE Joseph Ossai, Texas #46
I originally had pick 37, and was looking at Ossai as well as other players like Nick Bolton as a possible selection. However, the Broncos came to me with a nice offer that netted me a current 4th and a 2022 6th while only moving back 3 spots. I acquired the 40th pick and used that on Ossai.
Ossai is a great pass rusher who is also talented in the run game. He was moved around a good amount in college before settling as an EDGE for the Texas Longhorns. He is big and fast, and can be moved around the D line. The Eagles run a 4-3 defense which Ossai can excel in, and he also works very well in other defensive packages. Putting Ossai on this already promising D Line with names like Derek Barnett, Brandon Graham, Josh Sweat, and most importantly Fletcher Cox could put this line back at the peaks they experienced in 2017, when their defense could take over and destroy the opposing offense.
 
41) Detroit (Zingy): EDGE Jaelan Phillips, Miami #15
 
42) NY Giants (rubbersoul): LB Nick Bolton, Missouri #32
 
43) Detroit (Zingy): WR Terrace Marshall, LSU #6
 
44) Dallas (spencerw): IDL Daviyon Nixon, Iowa #54
I'm once again addressing the putrid Dallas defense that gave up almost 30 points a game last season. Nixon can line up at the 3-tech as a 4-3 DT under Dan Quinn and can make an immediate impact on the inside as a power gap rusher and can help with one of the worst rush defenses in the league (almost 160 rush yards/game). I was hoping to grab Bolton here, but Nixon is a solid IDL that can shore up a huge hole in the Dallas defense on day 1. The Cowboys now have 2 young defensives pieces to begin rebuilding/rejuvenating a declining side of the ball.
 
45) Jacksonville (Gmoney): TE Pat Freiermuth, Penn St #87
 
46) New England (rgoing): T Jackson Carman, Clemson #79
The Patriots picked Clemson standout Jackson Carman. The Patriots are unsure if he will stay at Tackle or move to guard, what they do know is that they received a powerful and athletic player standing at 6’5 330. Carman is best known for his superb run, although he was able to neutralize DROY Chase Young in the 2019 CFP Playoffs last season. Carman fits perfectly for the Patriots offense as they are known for their smash mouth football, and play-action passing.
 
47) LA Chargers (run1609): IOL Trey Smith, Tennessee #73
This pick is contingent upon his medicals checking out (blood clots in lungs, 2018). Frankly, I'm not positive as to what a Joe Lombardi offense will look like, but I do know that Smith has what it takes to succeed at the next level. Very powerful, consistenly wins in a phone booth but has the requisite athleticism for his size to win in space too.
 
48) Las Vegas (jmah): EDGE Carlos Basham Jr, Wake Forest #9
Carlos Basham Jr.: I've seen PFF tweet about this guy before so I think he might be good. Raiders D line is already looking much improved with Barmore at 17 and now "Boogie" Basham at 48.
 
49) Arizona (Brodie): IDL Marvin Wilson, FSU #21
 
50) Miami (tolgzz): RB Travis Etienne, Clemson #9
 
51) Washington (klondike): T Liam Eichenberg, Notre Dame #74
WFT desperately needs tackle. He has shown great strides in advancing his game. Not the most physically gifted player, but he plays smart football.
 
TRADE: Carolina gives 2.20 (52), LA Rams gives 2.25 (57), 6.25 (210), 2022 LAR 5th
52) LA Rams (prime): LB Dylan Moses, Alabama #32
The Rams are projected to be bottom-5 in cap space in both 2021 and 2022 once the Stafford trade goes through according to OTC, and they don’t have a first-round choice until 2024. Even worse, they have six starters projected to be UFAs this year (Reynolds, Blythe, Floyd, Ebukam, Johnson, Hill), and four next year (Corbett, Kiser, Young, Fuller). As a result, landing a future starter with this pick was crucial. I was willing to move up a little because of how important it was to land a future starter here. Moses had a dominant 2018 season before missing 2019 with a knee injury and rebounding in 2020, and I think he fits well as a 3-4 ILB replacement to either Micah Kiser or Kenny Young in 2022.
 
53) Tennessee (botlane): EDGE Jaylen Twyman, Pitt #97
 
54) Indianapolis (Viddstuff): EDGE Patrick Jones II, Pitt #91
 
55) Pittsburgh (Fireblast): RB Kenneth Gainwell, Memphis #19
Although the steelers have some other needs, RB I felt was a major one. James connor isn't the answer, and I think gainwell although only really playing 1 season fully can provide versatility in the backfield, as not only did he have almost 1500 yards on the ground, with an average of over 6 yds per carry, he also had just over 600 yds receiving. Overall, I think he can be a solid RB for the steelers, assuming their offensive line holds.
 
56) Seattle (Kdelgado): IOL Landon Dickerson, Alabama #69
 
57) Carolina (cantstopthis): CB Greg Newsome II, Northwestern #2
After the Chiefs took Jalen Mayfield, I was left in an awkward spot. I didn't feel too strongly about any of the guys on the board at 2.39. Luckily, the Chicago Bears came calling and I was able to regain some of the assets that were lost in the trade up for Justin Fields. At 2.52, I had a few guys on my board I was comfortable with and decided to trade back 5 spots, taking a chance that at least one of my guys would be there. Luckily, Newsome was still on the board.
Greg Newsome II has been rising on boards everywhere, and rightfully so. He has good ball skills to combine with solid athleticism as well as a nice frame that will help him to succeed at the next level. He also has good awareness as well as good instincts to help him out. Newsome will fit right in with the Carolina Panthers, who were among the leaders with their usage of cover 3 and zone.
 
58) Baltimore (oman): IOL Ben Cleveland, Georgia #74
 
59) Cleveland (Huntington): S Richie Grant, UCF #27
Grant is tall, athletic, versatile player who can play both FS or SS and even nickel if necessary, though likely slots as aFS. A productive ball hawk, high motor player, and energetic tackler, the Senior Bowl star Grant has the makings to be a fan favorite in Cleveland for years to come.
 
60) New Orleans (Misery): WR Elijah Moore, Ole Miss #8
 
61) Buffalo (Antrob): IDL Levi Onwuzurike, Washington #95
One of the more glossed over storylines of the Bills 2020 season was their defensive regression. They lost a lot of talent in their front 7 to FA. This pick attempts to replenish the young talent in that area. Levi is quickly becoming a big riser in the draft as more people familiarize themselves w/ his 2019 film. He's a really talented defensive lineman who has the ability to develop into a potential every down force. He has a matured frame and plays with an explosiveness that jumps off on tape. In addition to his physical tools, he is also pretty advanced from a technical perspective as well, as he knows how to use his hands and understands the importance of filling space and occupying gaps. To me, in a relatively weak IDL class, he's one of the few prospects who could become something worth noting at the next level, mainly due to how well rounded he is. His natural athleticism, burst, quickness and get-off coupled with his technical refinements (hands, leverage, body control) give me confidence that he can effect the QB consistently in the passing game. Whereas his strength, quickness, instincts, length and leverage make me optimistic he can be good against the run in time as well.
 
62) Green Bay (herb): WR Amon-Ra St Brown, USC #8
 
TRADE: New England gives 2.31 (63), Philadelphia gives 3.06 (70), 4.09 (113), 2022 PHI 5th
63) Philadelphia (Salty): CB Eric Stokes, Georgia #27
I originally had the 70th overall pick in the draft, but I had not addressed one of the Eagles biggest needs yet in the draft; Cornerback. The Eagles have struggled with that position, and it has been a weak point of their defense the past few years. Greg Newsome II went a few picks before and I was getting worried that there wouldn't be a quality Corner available at my pick. Because of this fear, I traded up to pick 63. Admittedly, I overpaid. I gave up pick 70, the 4th round pick I got from the Broncos trade back, as well as a 2022 5th for pick 63, to the Patriots. This was an overpay, yet one with a reason, as it was used to secure a good Corner for the team.
Eric Stokes is a good Corner prospect who can be a day 1 starter who develops into a impact player for the Eagles. He is on the taller side at 6'1", and can play both man and zone well. He has some ball skill issues and you might see him not making some easy interceptions at the next level and can clean his technique up some, but hes a good prospect that is a bit of a steal at the end of the second round. With Stokes on the team the secondary will improve and might finally have some promise.
 
64) Kansas City (teutonic): LB Chazz Surratt, UNC #21
A converted QB, Surratt is another very toolsy player for the chiefs. I like the speed he plays with and he fits the mold of the 'modern' LB. He has a lot of work to do still but I think with the right coaching he can realize his potential.  
65) Jacksonville (Gmoney): CB Shaun Wade, Ohio St #24
 
66) NY Jets (stackingdollars): CB Elijah Moldin, Washington #3
Jets lack CB depth and arguably their best CB, Brian Poole, is a FA this year. Molden has great instincts, but is a little undersized, and can play ideally as a nickel CB. He thrives in zone coverage and is solid in run support. Molden can be a starter from day 1 and grow into the Saleh defensive system.
 
67) Houston (Kdelgado): T Teven Jenkins, Oklahoma St #73
 
68) Atlanta (jorjor): EDGE Quincy Roche, Miami #2
The falcons suck at edge and Quincy Roche is my favorite edge rusher available.
 
69) Cincinnati (Sliz): IDL Jay Tufele, USC #78
With Geno Atkins aging out a bit, and a potential cap casualty either this year or next, it was hard to pass on the top rated player on my board by a large margin (second time a USC player has slipped to my range). Tufele is a dominant player at the 3T with versatility to take snaps along the interior as needed. He offers value on all 3 downs, and gives a stud to slot in beside DJ Reader longterm. With the run on CBs and Edge players prior to our pick, Bengals take another pick to build the trenches.
 
70) New England (rgoing): IOL Quinn Meinerz, UW-Whitewater #77
Senior Bowl standout Quinn Meinerz gets selected, not many know about Wisconsin Whitewater since it is a D3 school. Meinerz impressed and dominated at the Senior Bowl, some scouts had him rising into the top 100 even the top 50 for best available players. Questions always rise when drafting a player at a lower level, I think the Senior Bowl eliminated any of those speculations for Mr. Meinerz. The Patriots love the value they have received with their pick!
 
71) Denver (paxton): LB Charles Snowden, Virginia #11
I was scared the patriots would pick him. Really good fit for their...ahem….organizational philosophy. Anyways, Maybe this is a bit of a reach, but it’s impossible for me to pass on Snowden. You can't teach his physical tools. A 6’7 defender who can play all over the front 7, paired with Vic Fangio? This is a bit of a risk, but its at a position of need for the Broncos and I believe his tools, ceiling and football IQ make it a risk worth taking.
 
72) Detroit (Zingy): S Jevon Holland, Oregon #8
 
73) Miami (tolgzz): WR Tylan Wallace, Oklahoma St #2
Miami selects WR Tylan Wallace to add yet another weapon for their QB they decided to stick with Tua. Tylan they feel slipped to their laps in this draft and believe he cant be a very solid weapon with good upside that has been overshadowed by an elite WR class.
 
74) Washington (klondike): CB Aaron Robinson, UCF #31
 
75) Dallas (spencerw): CB Ifeatu Melifonwu, Syracuse #23
I go defense for the third time in as many picks, I was hoping for an OT (not big on Radnunz) but none really fell the way I wanted, this is the second CB drafted but I see Ifeatu excelling way more as a S in the next level, this fills another hole Day 1 IMO and cleans up the secondary.
 
TRADE: NY Giants give 3.12 (76), New England gives 3.31 (95), 4.15 (120)
76) New England (rgoing): WR D'Wayne Eskridge, W Michigan #1
Patriots selected speedy receiver D’Wayne Eskridge out Western Michigan University. There were many questions why the Patriots waited to take a receiver until the 76th pick in the draft, Eskridge was the reason why! The former track star runs a (4.3 – 4.4) 40yd, putting him up as one of the fastest WR in the draft. There were a bunch of questions about the low level competition in the MAC, but D’Wayne showed he can go up against some of the best at the Senior Bowl this year. The idea is that D’Wayne can come in and be a starter day 1 on special teams returning kicks as well as a slot receiver.
 
77) voided
 
78) LA Chargers (run1609): T Dillon Radunz, NDSU #73
Was ecstatic to see Radunz at this pick. Has been training with the recently-retired Joe Staley all year and it showed at the Senior Bowl last week, where he was named OL of the week by his peers. The Chargers have no long-term pieces at OT and a ROTY that needs protecting. Radunz fits the bill perfectly.
 
79) Minnesota (beezus): S Hamsah Nasirildeen, FSU #23
 
80) Minnesota (beezus): IOL Josh Myers, Ohio St #71
At the top of the third round, the Vikings had 4 players they were targeting: jay tufele, Jevon Holland, Dillon radunz, and hamsah nasirildeen. Three of the four were gone by the time our picks came around, three out of the four were gone (whoever took Dillon radunz is a stupid dumb idiot head). After taking nasirildeen at 79, it came down to Myers and walker little. The Vikings ultimately went with Myers at 80, shying away from Little’s injury history. Myers offers a strong run blocking profile coming out of the gate, but is admittedly a work in progress in the pass game. Regardless, an upgrade over Dakota “turnstyle” dozier was needed, and Myers should be a day one improvement.
 
81) Las Vegas (jmah): S Paris Ford, Pitt #12
I searched Paris Ford on YouTube and he has a highlight vid with almost a million views. That’s a steal in the 3rd round.
 
82) Miami (tolgzz): IDL Tyler Shelvin, LSU #72
The Pick is In. Dolphins select IDL Tyler Shelvin, LSU. Miami adds a true nose tackle in Shelvin adding to their DL to help stop against the run. With Miami's plan to rotate DL Shelvin will be in during running downs where the Dolphins lack run stoppers on the DL.
 
83) Washington (klondike): RB Demetric Felton, UCLA #10
 
84) Carolina (cantstopthis): T Walker Little, Stanford #72
Little is a high upside prospect who has the potential to be one of the better tackles in this draft. With great size and length, Little is able to eliminate defenders from the play. He also has solid athleticism and can play in multiple schemes. With the Panthers oline being up in the air right now, it was important to take a guy who could protect Fields blindside.
 
TRADE: Indianapolis gives 3.21 (85), Cleveland gives 3.28 (92), 6.27 (212)
85) Cleveland (Huntington): S Keith Taylor, Washington #27
Taylor is a tall cornerback who isn’t afraid to tackle ball carriers or receivers. A senior, he’s athletic and has experience playing both man and zone coverage. Can stay with most receivers but will get burnt by speedsters one on one. Lack of any collegiate interceptions is concerning, but his size and coverage skills will earn him a role in any NFL secondary.
 
86) Tennessee (botlane): IDL Tedarrell Slaton, Florida #56
 
87) NY Jets (stackingdollars): LB Cameron McGrone, Michigan #44
The Jets LB group has a few question marks. CJ Mosley has pretty much had 2 years off from football, Neville Hewitt is a free agent, and Blake Cashman can’t stay healthy. McGrone can be a three down LB adding some depth and becoming a starter.
 
88) Pittsburgh (Fireblast): IOL Deonte Brown, Alabama #65
An absolutely huge frame at 6'4 350lbs, I believe Brown can be a solid Guard in the nfl, his size means that he can be a force both in pass and run blocking, and I think overall he can be a big peice of that aging O-line, perhaps replacing one of their current guards within the next year or 2.
 
89) San Francisco (Anc): EDGE Dayo Odeyingbo, Vanderbilt #10
Niners get good value here as Odeyingbo falls to them at 89. With a number of players departing in FA or victims of potential cuts across the DL, SF targets a versatile player who lined up both as a 3T and on the EDGE productively. Odeyingbo has great length which he knows how to use to his advantage to control his opponents, and has a high ceiling as a pass rusher. He has a strong club move and uses his athleticism to quickly close out on QBs once he gets free. Needs work to refine his pass rush attack, as the most common reps involve him relying on his length and burst. Against the run he has a lot of work to do, especially on the interior where his subpar pad level can get him blown up too often. Does do a good job at setting the edge. Overall, Odeyingbo is something of a project which isn't the best fit for the Niner's timeline but we didn't want to pass on good value at a position group of need.
 
90) Cleveland (Huntington): WR Dyami Brown, UNC #2
Tall, vertical receiver who had a highly productive collegiate career. Athletic with a great burst, he can get down the field and go after deep balls. An energetic blocker and able ball carrier, he’s a potential 3 down WR if he works on his release and route tree. Can contribute immediately and has starting WR potential.
 
91) Arizona (Brodie): CB Shakur Brown, Michigan St #29
 
92) Indianapolis (Viddstuff): WR Marlon Williams, UCF #6
With questions surrounding TY Hilton’s return, I decided to take a WR who could fill in in case TY leaves. While not a traditional slot Wr, Williams provides skill over the middle as a big slot wr, and will be a good target for any QB. He should get snaps early as a rookie.
 
93) Cleveland (Huntington): LB Jabril Cox, LSU #19
Tall, agile LB with superb coverage skills. A natural 4-3 OLB who fits the Browns scheme very well. Has the ability to cover TE or RB and has tremendous range and motor. Needs to learn how to take on and disengage blocks, but has the makings of a 3 down OLB who can do it all.  
94) Buffalo (Antrob): T Spencer Brown, N Iowa #76
After having a really good season Daryl Williams is set to hit FA. I think the Bills should prioritize re-signing him, but even at his best I wouldn't view him as a long term solution at RT. Spencer Brown is an interesting prospect who's recently gotten more attention after having a really nice week at the Senior Bowl. Standing at 6'8" he offers unique length and size at the Tackle position. He also has good mobility and a light, nimble lower half in which he still has the opportunity to fill out to really solidify his anchor which is already pretty decent. He plays with the 'mean streak' that you always want to see out of your OL. And as a small school guy, dominated his competition which you always want to see, which he parlayed into solidifying himself as a guy in the Senior Bowl against legitimate rushers. The hope would be that he and Dion Dawkins can be the anchors on the Bills edges in regards to protecting Josh Allen and opening up running lanes for Najee Harris for the next decade.
 
95) NY Giants (rubbersoul): EDGE Hamilcar Rashed, Oregon St #9
 
96) Kansas City (teutonic): EDGE Payton Turner, Houston #98
Turner is another player with an ideal frame that is raw. He is a big edge player with some positional versatility that should be able to take over for Kpassgnon.  
97) Tampa Bay (EFS): IOL Aaron Banks, Notre Dame #69
At 6'6", 330 lbs, Aaron Banks is a dependable, well-rounded, G who also has some experience playing at T. He's a smart player who frequently reaches the second level and neutralizes oncoming defenders. In Tampa Bay, he'll serve as a backup to Ali Marpet and serve as a welcome depth piece.
 
98) LA Chargers (run1609): LB Baron Browning, Ohio St #5
 
99) New Orleans (Misery): CB Israel Mukuamu, South Carolina #24
 
100) Dallas (spencerw): TE Brevin Jordan, Miami #9
I went with a piece I think can be utilized anywhere on the field besides wideout, he lined up all over the place at miami and was used a lot in pass/run blocking and route running, I wanted to go OT at some point but the board never really fell the way I wanted to so I decided to go with a high utility weapon for them to use
 
101) Tennessee: WR Seth Williams, Auburn #18
 
102) LA Rams (prime): EDGE Joshua Kaindoh, FSU #13
Floyd and Ebukam are free agents in 2021, and given the Rams’ relatively poor standing with the salary cap, it may make sense to try to get edge rushers early in the draft. Kaindoh fits the athletic mold of Floyd, and he has the length to give tackles fits whilst he develops his pass-rush arsenal over the next couple seasons.
 
103) San Francisco (Anc): CB Paulson Adebo, Stanford #11
 
TRADE: LA Rams gives 3.39 (103), Minnesota gives 4.14 (119), 6.15 (201)
104) Minnesota (beezus): IDL Tommy Togiai, Ohio St #72
tommy togaia profiles as a player who can offer year one upside as a run defender at the three tech with potential to develop as a pass rusher. This past year he logged 24 pressures and three sacks for the Buckeyes, and could continue to grow as a pass rusher under the tutelage of MN’s exceptional defensive coaching
 
105) Baltimore (oman): WR Damonte Coxie, Memphis #10
 
106) Saints (misery): EDGE Rashad Weaver, Pitt #17
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@SecretaryZinke: Today at the #OTC2017 in Houston I signed 2 Sec Orders to develop a new 5-Year Plan and establish a senior energy c… https://t.co/EPYLnOaNRi

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Why the Minnesota Timberwolves will go 72-0 in the 20-21 season and how they will beat every single team in the NBA.

The Wolves are going to go 72-0 this season. You don't have to take my word for it, but luckily I have provided 29 (extremely statistically driven and accurate) reasons for why they will beat every single team in the NBA this season.
Boston Celtics: The Celtics were good last season, but unfortunately for them they now have Jeffrey Demarco Teague on their team. This will cause arguments between the team for 24 seconds on every offensive possession until it either results in a shot clock violation or last second heave which leaves a lot of room for the Wolves to come out on top.
Brooklyn Nets: With D'Angelo Russell, Ed Davis, and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson being ex-Nets players, the amount of turnovers by the Nets due to confusion on who their actual teammates are will be enough to push the Wolves over the top.
New York Knicks: It's the Knicks.
Philadelphia 76ers: This rejuvenated team from the city of brotherly love sadly has no pairs of brothers on the team together. This will inevitably cause the team to fail under the pressure of living up to their city name, which will provide a lackluster challenge that the Wolves can easily overcome.
Toronto Raptors: With the Raptors moving to Tampa for this season, the north is left uncontested to the Wolves. With their slogan "We The North" being rendered useless, they will falter under the realization that the Wolves slogan "All Eyes North" is now the only geographically correct slogan out of the two, allowing the Wolves to easily claim victory.
Chicago Bulls: The Bulls are from the Windy City, but unfortunately for them the Wolves are from the Twin Cities. Since 2 is more than 1, the Wolves easily win due to the sheer difference in the number of cities representing their team.
Cleveland Cavaliers: While MVP caliber player Thon Maker will be a tough challenge to overcome, the Cavaliers' brain damage from trying to read the font on their new city edition jerseys will lower the competition enough to propel the Wolves to a smooth win.
Detroit Pistons: With no sense of direction in their front office, the Pistons will also have no sense of direction on the court, causing them to score at least 20 points per game on the wrong goal. This opens up a wide point differential that will result in an easy win for the Wolves.
Indiana Pacers: It's no surprise that Oladipo constantly talks about "wanting to play for the other team", but when the Wolves and Pacers meet up he will take it a step further by ACTUALLY playing for the other team. This causes a 6v4 at all times that leads to an absolute domination of the Oladipo-less Indiana Pacers.
Milwaukee Bucks: The Bucks no longer have Robin Lopez, who most likely left because he was fearful of being dunked on by Jarrett "I'm Like That" Culver again. When Culver and the Bucks meet, they will be scared of him enough to leave the paint wide open, which avoids all potential posters, but also leaves the Wolves wide open to score easy layups and take control of the entire game.
Atlanta Hawks: In order to beat the Hawks, the Wolves need to arrange a motivational speech for the team from an Atlanta Falcons player ahead of time. By following the instructions and recommendations of the Falcons, the Hawks will completely give up in the 4th quarter and allow the Wolves to score as much as they want. This renders the other three quarters of the game essentially useless, which allows the Wolves to save energy for the absolute massacre of points that they will drop in the 4th, ending in a Wolves win.
Charlotte Hornets: When Michael Jordan sees the Wolves' two max contracts compared to the Hornets' one max contract, he will take it personally since he has to be #1 at everything. In an attempt to top the Wolves in this category, he will trade a majority of the roster mid game in order to make enough cap room to sign two bad players on max contracts. This will leave the Hornets severely undermanned and end in a Wolves win, but at least Jordan can have the moral victory of having more max contracts than the Wolves.
Miami Heat: While wearing their new "Trix Yogurt" city edition jerseys, Jimmy Butler will be reminded of the times he used to eat Trix Yogurt and String Cheese together as a kid. As the word "String" continuously repeats in his mind, he will also remember the time when he beat the Wolves in practice with the 3rd stringers. In an arrogant attempt to humiliate the Wolves, he will request that the coach only plays him and the Heat's 3rd stringers for the rest of the game. This will wildly backfire against the Wolves' new and improved team and ultimately lose the Heat the game.
Orlando Magic: The Magic made a huge mistake this season by not drafting rapper Sheck Wes to create an all-time duo with Mo Bamba. This will obviously create a significant lack of hoes calling the players' phones, therefore creating a large amount of loneliness among the Magic. This allows the chemistry-driven Wolves to achieve an easy victory.
Washington Wizards: While the loss of John Wall is unfortunate for the Wizards, there will still be another wall on the court. By using all of the bricks that Russell Westbrook puts up in order to create a brick wall for defense, the Wolves can essentially hold the Wizards to 0 points for the rest of the game since there is no way to get the ball around it. By creating any type of point differential before the wall is built, the Wolves can hold the score for the rest of the game and finish with a win.
Denver Nuggets: This one is simple. As long as there isn't both a 3 and a 1 on the scoreboard at the same time, the Wolves will have an easy time winning. In order to accomplish this, the Wolves may have to score on themselves multiple times a game and miss free throws on purpose, but by not allowing the Nuggets to get that 3-1 mentality, there is a 0% chance that they win.
Oklahoma City Thunder: The Thunder lose simply due to the fact that they won't even be able to remember who is on their team every week when another player gets traded for a pick. This confusion and lack of chemistry will lead the Thunder to many losses during the season, including the ones to the Wolves.
Portland Trail Blazers: The NBA halftime show rap battle between Anthony "Lil Baby" Edwards and Damian "DAME D.O.L.L.A" Lillard will gain enough attention from the Blazers' players to distract them long enough for the Wolves to score many times against an open court, leading them to an opposition-less victory.
Utah Jazz: With Anthony Edwards' favorite artist being Lil Baby, KAT's favorite artist being Mac Miller, and Josh Okogie's favorite artist being Young Thug, the rap-loving Wolves will play their favorite music throughout the entire game in order to prove how much they collectively hate jazz music. This extra motivation would be enough to lead any team to a win, and in this specific matchup, the Wolves will come out with an astounding victory.
Golden State Warriors: Wiggins' revenge game may seem like a scary thought to some, but through his charismatic delusions of "I gained weight and improved my handle this offseason", the Warriors will run the ball through Wiggins on every single play, leading to them only scoring inefficient points. This will allow the Wolves not only to outscore the Warriors, but also play amazing defense towards their very predictable offensive scheme.
LA Clippers: With the Clippers' chemistry issues, the Wolves won't even have to try in order to win this one. With Kawhi and Paul George causing issues in the locker room due to their diva egos, coupled with the fact that Clippers coach Ty Lue won't be able to remember the names of his players in order to call plays, the Wolves will have a smooth sailing victory past their disgruntled team.
Los Angeles Lakers: The Lakers are a tough team to beat, but the answer to beating them involves a psychological attack on the team. By having Wolves fans spam the DMs and Tweets of Lakers players with "Mickey Mouse Ring", the Lakers will be unable to focus on the game and instead question whether the 2019-2020 season ring counts or not. This mass hysteria will stay with the Lakers for the whole season, allowing the Wolves to pass them with ease.
Phoenix Suns: Even though the New Valley Boyz have reinforced their roster by adding Chris Paul, they have taken a step back by losing their two best looking players in Kelly Oubre and Ricky Rubio. With the addition of Rubio to the Wolves, there is now a disproportionate amount of good looking NBA players between the teams, which we can assume gives the Wolves a clear win in this matchup due to all of the swooning that will be coming from the Suns and distracting them throughout the match.
Sacramento Kings: While De'Aaron Fox is a shining light for the Kings organization, they also have coach Luke Walton who seems to be weary about starting his best players. If the trend continues forward throughout the season, the Wolves may find themselves facing an entire lineup of G-Leaguers for the majority of the game, which will be a simple task for them to overcome.
Dallas Mavericks: The path to beating the Mavericks comes through ownership. With Glen Taylor on his way to sell the team, the Wolves need to formulate a plan. In order to do this, Glen should cooperate with Mark Cuban throughout the process in order to make the Wolves even better. Before Mark leaves Dallas, he can force the front office to trade Luka to the Wolves for dirt cheap and then sell ownership of the Mavericks for full price while simultaneously buying the Wolves for a discount. By doing this he not only makes a ton of money, but he also creates a superteam in Minnesota while essentially crippling the Mavericks. Without Luka the Mavericks don't stand a chance against the Wolves and their newly formed dynasty.
Houston Rockets: By the time the Wolves land in Houston the Rockets already know that they have lost. Behind the insane defense of Josh "Literally James Harden's Father" Okogie, the Rockets are unable to run the ball through Harden. Additionally, with the loss of one of their best defenders in Robert Covington, all is hopeless for the Rockets as they are completely demolished on defense and Josh Okogie once again proves why James Harden cannot compete on the same level as him.
Memphis Grizzlies: The strategy to defeat the Grizzlies lies in the name of their best player. By rearranging the letters in Ja Morant you can form the words "Jam Or Ant". By showing this to Anthony Edwards, he is then extremely offended by being compared to jam. After he builds up all of his anger, he will then unleash an onslaught of offense on the Grizzlies and overwhelm them by beating Wilt's NBA record of 100 points. This will obviously result in a Wolves win due to the insane score differential at the end.
New Orleans Pelicans: In order to beat the Pelicans, the Wolves need to really give the players what they want. By placing a plate of fresh New Orleans cooking as well as a newly rolled blunt on the sidelines after every timeout, the Pelicans' star players Zion Williamson and Brandon Ingram will be so attracted by the objects waiting for them that they will simply walk off of the court mid game in order to sit down and enjoy themselves. This will create a huge opening in the now 3v5 game that the Wolves can take advantage of and use to glide to victory.
San Antonio Spurs: The Spurs are led by veterans LaMarcus Aldridge and DeMar DeRozan. By forcing those two players to foul out of the game extremely early, all-time coach Greg Popovich is forced to check himself into the game and provide veteran leadership for the rest of the young squad. While Popovich has proven to be a great coach, he will be a significant liability for the Spurs on the court, basically creating a 4v5 situation for the Wolves to capitalize on and eventually win the game.
GO WOLVES!
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My Mock 1.0 - tell me your thoughts on each pick

1. Jacksonville Jaguars – Trevor Lawrence, QB, Clemson

Lawrence is a generational prospect and will be the first overall pick unless a crash happens. He’s the best quarterback prospect since Andrew Luck and may flip the fortunes for the Jaguars franchise.

2. New York Jets – Justin Fields, QB, Ohio State

Fields is still QB2 on my Big Board. He is the embodiment of the next generation of stars coming into the NFL, bolstering serious running capability and tremendous arm talent.

3. Miami Dolphins (via Houston Texans) – Penei Sewell, OT, Oregon

Imagine trading an elite tackle only to find the replacement in the draft a year later and then also get an additional pick out of it. While tackle isn’t the biggest need, it improves two spots of the offensive line. The Dolphins can move Robert Hunt into right guard, where he’ll get more help in pass protection and have Sewell at right tackle. Overall, Sewell has a chance to be one of the best tackles in the game.

4. Atlanta Falcons – Zach Wilson, QB, BYU

The Falcons will have a new General Manager and Head Coach, meaning this pick could go one of two ways. 1. The pick is safe and high ceiling (maybe a defender), which would allow the Falcons to improve right away. 2. Or the pick is geared for the future in finding replacements for Matt Ryan.
Wilson is worthy of the first overall pick if Lawrence and Fields weren’t in this draft class. He’s got mobility, arm talent, and a great ability to read the field.
You can read our scouting report on Wilson here.

5. Cincinnati Bengals – Ja’Marr Chase, WR, LSU

The objective of the Bengals offseason has to be increasing the support for Joe Burrow. So through free agency, they can pick up a guard (Andrew Wylie), and finding more defensive pieces. Overall, this pick puts the Bengals in an extremely difficult position as there is no other tackle worth a top ten pick unless you take Christian Darrisaw. However, Ja’Marr Chase is in a different category of playmakers and instantly increases the firepower of this offense. To put it in perspective, Chase was better than Justin Jefferson on the field and statistically. He isn’t the same profile of receiver but has a similar upside – a dynamic receiver capable of taking an offense to the next level.
You can read our scouting report on Chase here.

6. Philadelphia Eagles – Caleb Farley, CB, Virginia Tech

It is evident from past drafts that Howie Roseman does not value linebackers similar to other teams even though the team needs to get better at that position. With that said, the cornerback class has some talent at the top, in Caleb Farley and Patrick Surtain.
Farley’s profile might align better for the Eagles than Surtain, but with Jim Schwartz not coaching the defense in 2021 they could look for a different profile. All in all, Farley’s traits and athleticism give him a higher ceiling than Surtain.

7. Detroit Lions – Micah Parsons, LB, Penn State

This is also a concerning position for the Lions as the cap situation is not good. They do not have the capital to re-sign Kenny Golladay, yet their defense struggled all year. Similar to the Falcons they could opt to pick the next quarterback of the future if they want, but the drop-off from Wilson to Trey Lance/others is significant. Thus, the team goes with a dynamic player in Parsons.
Parsons is a run and chase linebacker who is the next breed of speed linebackers who can cover and get sideline to sideline quickly. Ideally, he’s still getting better at play recognition and would benefit from a year of playing at outside linebacker – run and chase and then move to middle linebacker.

8. Carolina Panthers – Kyle Pitts, TE, Florida

Parsons was the best fit for Carolina as no other linebacker has the ceiling he does. As well, there is no quarterback worth picking here. Pitts is the best remaining player and the last of the top-tiered players. He is the kind of tight end that changes an offense, as he’ll draw double teams, mismatches, and make ridiculous plays.

9. Denver Broncos – Patrick Surtain II, CB, Alabama

The Broncos desperately need help at corner and Surtain is best available. He’s a sure tackler and is someone who could be very successful in a scheme with good safety play. Overall, Surtain is the ideal corner, with great length, technique, and physicality. However, he lacks deep speed and may give up big plays at an inopportune time.

10. Dallas Cowboys – Jaycee Horn, CB, South Carolina

The Cowboys’ biggest need is corner help to pair with Trevon Diggs. Horn is a nice fit in the Cowboys defense, as he can lock up and play press. The only thing he lacks is being a threat to generate turnovers, which is something the Cowboys typically look for in their cornerbacks.

11. New York Giants – Rashod Bateman, WR, Minnesota

Darius Slayton, Golden Tate, and Sterling Shepard are not enough to help Daniel Jones make the jump to a franchise quarterback, the team must give him more weapons. Enter Bateman, a clone of Allen Robinson who excels in all levels of the field. He’s a chain mover and has a legitimate chance to be the best wide receiver on the team by the end of the season. Bateman is the pick over Davonta Smith and Jaylen Waddle for his profile. He’s a larger target and one of the best contested-catch receivers in the class.
You can read our scouting report on Bateman here.

12. San Francisco 49ers – Trey Lance, QB, North Dakota

Lance is a very raw prospect who needs multiple years before he’s ready to take over. However, his pocket mobility, rushing threat, and his ability to make specular plays is something Kyle Shanahan can make into a franchise quarterback. Lance fits the mold for the Niners’ scheme, as he’s comfortable throwing the ball on the move and capable of extending plays.

13. Los Angeles Chargers – Christian Darrisaw, OT, Virginia Tech

Darrisaw has put up quality performances all year, to the point where he should be considered in the top 20. Darrisaw has the agility and mobility to become a franchise tackle. As well, his pass blocking technique is notability advanced and should allow him to take on edge defenders one on one.

14. Minnesota Vikings – Kwity Paye, EDGE, Michigan

Vikings were really good on paper at edge rusher at the beginning of the season. Yet the departure of Yannick Ngakoue and injury to Danielle Hunter severely hampered the defense and its ability to get to the passer. While the offensive line might be considered a greater priority, Kwity Paye could allow the Minnesota defense to return to its elite form.
Paye’s ascension this year was significant as he showed multiple pass-rushing moves, the ability to bend the end and flatten, rush with power, and use his hands, all of which makes him a candidate to be the first edge off the board.

15. New England Patriots – DeVonta Smith, WR, Alabama

Patriots need any sort of weapon, anybody that can catch a football. Smith is a very reliable receiver – showing great form and concentration while catching the ball. Yet, he gets his value from his ability to separate, manipulate defenders, and his nuanced route-running ability is top-notch in this year’s draft.

16. Arizona Cardinals – Travis Etienne, RB, Clemson

Etienne might be the only running back worth a top 40 selection, largely due to the home run threat ability and pass-catching ability. With his speed and contact balance, nobody is better suited for this offense. This is mainly because the offense is predicated on side-to-side movement with lots of run-pass-options – thus allowing more home-run opportunities from the bigger holes.

17. Las Vegas Raiders – Rashawn Slater, OT, Northwestern

Slater has positional value, making him a great fit for the Raiders who always have injuries on the line as well as underperforming pieces. On the interior, Denzelle Good has been an average guard and Richie Incognito is 37, where Trent Brown needs a solid back up due to the injuries.
You can read our scouting report on Slater here.

18. Miami Dolphins – Jaylen Waddle, WR, Alabama

Dolphins get a receiver that has a rapport with Tua Tagovailoa. Waddle is going to dominate at the combine with his speed and quickness. What sets him apart is his run after catch ability and short-area quickness. He consistently makes defenders miss and should command a large target share in this offense.

19. Washington Football Team – Samuel Cosmi, OT, Texas

Arguably, Cosmi is the offensive tackle with the highest upside (aside from Sewell), largely due to his mobility skills. Cosmi could be the next franchise tackle for the team.

20. Chicago Bears – Terrace Marshall Jr., WR, LSU

With Allen Robinson hitting free agency and few tackles remaining worth a first-round pick, the Bears go with Marshall. Marshall’s floor is a speed guy similar to Darnell Mooney, however, his ceiling is a dominant receiver for any team. His size, speed, and ability make him similar to D.J. Chark.

21. Jacksonville Jaguars (via Los Angeles Rams) – Chris Olave, WR, Ohio State

Multiple options here for the Jaguars, they could go with tackle, but it is a tier below. Yet, the run of three receivers in the last five picks forces them to get the last receiver worth a first-round pick. His ability to separate, run nuanced routes, and be a reliable pass-catcher will drive him to be a first-round pick. Additionally, getting a third good receiver will allow the passing offense to support Lawrence.

22. Indianapolis Colts – Gregory Rousseau, EDGE, Miami

Colts love to have guys who can play multiple positions on the defensive line. Rousseau has versatility and gets pressure from all positions on the line. He’s typically seen going before the 20s, however, he’s very raw and not NFL ready at all. It might take a year or two before we see him get consistent pressure.

23. Cleveland Browns – Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, LB, Notre Dame

This pick isn’t new, but it is by far the biggest need the Browns have. The Browns are still missing the dynamic linebacker who can get side to side. Owusu-Koramoah has been a huge riser throughout the draft process and can improve this defense significantly.
You can read our scouting report on Owusu-Koramoah here.

24. Tennessee Titans – Azeez Ojulari, EDGE, Georgia

Tennessee needs to generate more pressure from the edge and Ojulari fits the profile for them. He’s a 3-4 pass rusher who can rush from a two-point stance and with his hand in the dirt. The most impressive thing is his ability to rush with a plan and utilize his wide array of pass-rushing moves.
You can read our scouting report on Ojulari here.

25. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Christian Barmore, DT, Alabama

The Buccaneers need another defensive tackle as Ndamukong Suh will most likely be departing in free agency. This is a project pick, as Barmore has shown flashes, but just needs to put it all together. Vita Vea and Barmore would make an unstoppable pairing and would provide more opportunities to the edge rushers by generating interior pressure.

26. Baltimore Ravens – Joseph Ossai, EDGE, Texas

Ossai fits the Matt Judon mold of someone who can set the edge on runs, and also who bolsters pass rush potential. Ossai has significant upside and has the chance to be a dominant force on this defensive line with his strength and bevy of pass-rushing moves.

27. New York Jets (Seattle Seahawks) – Pat Freiermuth, TE, Penn State

Ideally, there is a receiver here that could pair with Denzel Mims and provide Justin Fields another option. Yet with the run on receivers, it isn’t worth it to go to the next tier when there is still a premier tight end available. Freiermuth’s draft stock may suffer due to the poor performance of the team, yet he’s excellent in all aspects of the position. He’s an excellent blocker, has great body control and catching ability, but he also has great run after catch ability, making him a weapon for the offense.

28. Pittsburgh Steelers – Alijah Vera-Tucker, OT/OG, USC

Vera-Tucker has positional versatility, where he could easily slot into left tackle or guard. The Steelers need to have more depth and a player with the potential to slot in almost anywhere.

29. New Orleans Saints – Tyson Campbell, CB, Georgia

Marshon Lattimore is set to depart in free agency after the 2021 season, and the Saints salary cap is currently among the worst in the league. Additionally, the team has to get better across from Lattimore for this season and improve the 32-year-old Janoris Jenkins spot. Campbell is raw compared to his teammate Eric Stokes but has more upside.

30. Buffalo Bills – Trey Smith IOL, Tennessee

Smith is a people mover and would fit nicely on the right side to pair with Cody Ford. He has a high ceiling, as we’ve seen extremely dominant play from him, but injuries have plagued his college career.

31. Green Bay Packers – Nick Bolton, LB, Missouri

Bolton makes sense over Zaven Collins for a few reasons, better in pass coverage and more instinctive. Arguably he’s going to be better in zone coverage, however, he might not be as good as Colins rushing the passer. Overall, Bolton is a well-rounded player who has the potential to be a star of a defense. He’s also an explosive athlete who is a sure tackler.

32. Kansas City Chiefs – Zaven Collins, LB

Colins could end up being the best linebacker in the class with his tools and athleticism. He has work to do in coverage though, as this is his biggest barrier to him becoming an elite linebacker.

Round 2

33. Jacksonville Jaguars – Eric Stokes, CB, Georgia

Jaguars need someone who can hold their own against bigger receivers. Stokes isn’t a great scheme fit, but the Jaguars desperately need to get better at the cornerback spot.
34. New York Jets – Alex Leatherwood, OT/G, Alabama
Leatherwood fits in nicely here, he can play guard or tackle in year one and make the full-time transition to right tackle in year two.
35. Atlanta Falcons – Jayson Oweh, EDGE Penn State
Marlon Davidson was a difficult scheme fit for the team last year, moreover, Dante Fowler has not had success. While the ideal pick would be finding a successor to Julio Jones, there is a lack of receivers here. Oweh is all upside at this point but could be dominant if he develops some consistency.
36. Miami Dolphins (via Houston Texans) – Carlos Basham Jr. EDGE, Wake Forest
Basham is a decent scheme fit, he’s strong enough to rush from the interior, and can play wide nine or seven tech with his quickness. He would go a long way to make this one of the most dominant fronts in the NFL.
37. Philadelphia Eagles – Brevin Jordan, TE, Miami
Jordan is a freakish athlete for his size. With Ertz likely headed to free agency, the Eagles need a replacement, as they run lots of two tight end sets. Jordan isn’t going to be a high volume catch guy like Ertz, but he can make explosive plays and has high upside.
38. Cincinnati Bengals – Jalen Mayfield, OT, Michigan
It worked out for the Bengals who risked not going offensive tackle in the first round. They are able to get Mayfield who will slide in nicely at right tackle. Mayfield is inconsistent, but with NFL experience and coaching could be a solid right tackle.
39. Carolina Panthers – Mac Jones, QB, Alabama
The Panthers are the right team to take on Desmond Ridder, however, he has officially opted to return to school. The next best option is going with Jones who can compete with Teddy Bridgewater for the starting spot. Jones has played extremely well, showing he can extend plays and be accurate. His best trait is his intelligence and ability to go through his progression, a good skill with this receiving core.
40. Denver Broncos – Myjai Sanders, EDGE, Cincinnati
Sanders has a lot of upside and would stand to learn a great deal from Von Miller. This pick is made with the belief that Miller is back, as Sanders needs to develop his run defending and polish his pass-rushing skill set before he becomes a full-time starter.
41. Detroit Lions – Rondale Moore, WR, Purdue
Moore has the highest upside remaining in this crop of receivers. He’s an explosive player with significant run after catch skills. However, his route running is unpolished and overall he will require some development before reaching his high ceiling.
You can read our scouting report on Moore here.
42. New York Giants – Creed Humphrey, C, Oklahoma
Tough pick as an edge rusher is the top need for the Giants, but there aren’t any that fit the scheme. The best remaining player is Humphrey who could significantly improve the interior offensive line. Humphrey is the top center in this draft and is a well-rounded player.
43. San Francisco 49ers – Paulson Adebo, CB, Stanford
Adebo could be the successor to Sherman with his good ball skills and strong zone coverage skills. Niners have needs on the offensive line, but the remaining tackles lack mobility and athleticism to fit the Shannahan scheme.
44. Dallas Cowboys – Dillon Radunz, OT, North Dakota State
Radunz wouldn’t need to start right away and can develop behind the current offensive line. Cowboys need to start thinking long term successor to Tyron Smith. Radunz has the potential to be great. The level of competition has been the only concern.
45. Jacksonville Jaguars (via Minnesota Vikings) – Andre Cisco, S, Syracuse
Cisco goes over Trevon Moehrig-Woodard due to the ball skills. Cisco also has more range on tape. If Cisco didn’t suffer a season-ending lower leg injury he would be a fringe first-rounder. Moreover, Cisco stock will be dependent on the combine and how healthy he is.
46. New England Patriots – Kyle Trask, QB, Florida
The Patriots need to have a replacement for Cam Newton if he can’t play better. Trask had a great year till his final game. The consensus is wide on what Trask will be in the NFL. However, he is worth taking the shot on in the second round.
You can read our scouting report on Trask here.
47. Los Angeles Chargers – Wyatt Davis, IOL, Ohio State
Davis falls due to somewhat of a disappointing season, as some analysts (including me) hyped him up to be a top 20 player. He has a chance to improve his stock during the National Championship.
48. Las Vegas Raiders – Shaun Wade, CB, Ohio State
The irony here is that the Raiders took Damon Arnette in the first round last year, and he has played incredibly poorly. Wade could be the replacement.
49. Arizona Cardinals – Asante Samuel Jr. CB, Florida State
The Cardinals need to retool the secondary and think about life after Patrick Peterson who may depart in free agency.
50. Miami Dolphins – Chazz Surratt, LB, North Carolina
Surratt has range and can get side to side quickly. He would pair nicely with Jerome Baker.
51. Washington Football Team – Hunter Long, TE, Boston College
Washington needs to find someone to play quarterback however, with Ridder going back to school, Washington will look to free agency or trade. The pick is then looking for a weapon and Long fits the bill. Long has been overshadowed by the top three tight ends but has played extremely well. Pairing him with Logan Thomaswould give the team two versatile tight ends.
52. Chicago Bears – Liam Eichenberg, OT, Notre Dame
No quarterbacks left leaves the Bears going offensive line. Bears have the option to cut Charles Leno and save 6 Million, thus they will likely need to address the line. Eichenberg is pro-ready, however, there are some athleticism concerns that could limit his ceiling.
53. Los Angeles Rams – Hamilcar Rashed Jr., EDGE, Oregon State
Rashed could be a great pass rusher if he develops properly. He’s got the tools to be good but is inconsistent.
54. Cleveland Browns – Jaelan Phillips, EDGE, Miami
Philips has lots of concerns – injury mainly. However, his play on the field is undeniable and he has a lot of upside if he can stay healthy.
55. Tennessee Titans – Daviyon Nixon, DT, Iowa
Nixon is a late riser in the draft process, but his pass-rushing upside is undeniable. He rushes with a plan and can win with quickness.
56. Indianapolis Colts – Brady Christensen, OT, BYU
Anthony Castonzo has been injured more often than not. Christensen has played very well this year and can be a good pass blocker going forward.
57. Baltimore Ravens – Amon-Ra St. Brown, WR, USC
St. Brown is a separator and can be the chain mover the Ravens are missing.
You can read our scouting report on St. Brown here.
58. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Kadarius Toney, WR, Florida
Chris Godwin and Shaquil Barrett are both free agents. The team will likely have to choose between them. The depth at wide receiver makes sense to go with Barrett as Godwin will cost a fortune. Toney is a raw technician, but has the athleticism and run after the catch ability.
You can read our scouting report on Toney here.
59. New York Jets (Via Pittsburgh Steelers) – Josh Myers, IOL/C, Ohio State
The Jets trade Sam Darnold to the Steelers for the 59th overall pick.
This is a win-win for both teams as the Steelers get to see if Darnold can be the future, while the Jets accumulate more picks.
While the Jets get Leatherwood at the beginning of the round, they could use a left guard. Myers is a well-rounded player and could be just what the Jets need to protect Fields.
60. Seattle Seahawks – Jay Tufele, IDL, Southern California
Tufele is a high energy player who would fit nicely in this defensive front.
61. New Orleans Saints – Dazz Newsome, WR, North Carolina
Newsome is a good route runner and can replace Emmanuel Sanders after the 2021 season.
62. Buffalo Bills – Derion Kendrick, CB, Clemson
Kendrick has shown high-level play but against lesser competition.
63. Green Bay Packers – Amari Rodgers, WR, Clemson
Rodgers doesn’t get enough credit for his route running and separating ability. He’s crafty and is also dynamic after the catch.
64. Kansas City Chiefs – Tamorrion Terry, WR, Florida State
FAST
submitted by Bpodloski to NFL_Draft [link] [comments]

The subtle intelligence behind the effect

Disclaimer: I have not written this to insult those with different beliefs to mine nor do I believe I have all the answers. I wrote this in the best way I could to elucidate my point and candidly explain my thoughts without getting lost in political correctness.
The effect is planned out and executed with precision. There’s a reason why Hypnotiq changed to Hpnotiq and not Harpnottique. There’s a reason why “life is like a box of chocolates” was changed to “life was like a box of chocolates” as opposed to “your life may be similar to boxes of truffles”. There’s a reason why the Berenstein bears changed to Berenstain instead of Bearenshtynnn. Because they were planned out and executed with precision. There is an obvious intelligence behind the effect.
It’s a concept that seems to go over most people’s heads when discussing this phenomenon, it’s called subtlety. Have it change just enough to awaken a certain amount of people on this earth but not so much that it causes mass wide spread panic.
If tomorrow everyone was all of a sudden green coloured instead of their usual skin colour or if we had a visible third eye protruding out of our heads or if Hitler changed to Hattlerr, the changes would be so severe and obvious that most of the world would immediately wake up to what was happening.
So why didn’t they do that? Wouldn’t that accomplish their task of awakening humanity to the nature of reality? Well perhaps that wasn’t their intention.
It would cause an absolute breakdown of human society. The goal behind those who orchestrated the effect was more likely to wake up a small percentage of people on our planet. Why us? Well that’s yet to be fully comprehended but the more we gravitate towards parallel universes where our books are spelled Berenstain, the further we move away from the truth.
You see, in essence that is a theory that has been pushed by university accredited professors but the sheer ridiculousness and wasted energy in creating multiple parallel realities where the spelling of a name was different would seem a colossal waste of time and energy no? Even if you don’t assume rational thought among the creators, that would surely be moronic right? It’s entirely theoretical whereas the effect is happening right in front of our eyes. They’re trying to sway you towards false theories so that it continues to place the effect in a place of illegitimacy.
So why is it often only these scientists that the media pushes into our faces who corroborate the parallel universe theory? Such as Stephen hawking or many others of the like? Well again it’s obvious, they’re trying to mislead you and because people are such sheep, they genuinely thought the secrets of the universe were coming out of Hawking’s brain when so much evidence proves this to be incorrect.
It’s easy to get people to believe something once you attach a sick, old scientist to the theory because most only see things though the lens the media forces on them. I won’t get into the details about why Hawking isn’t someone you should’ve been following, thats research anyone can do and come to some startling conclusions themselves.
There’s a reason why the Mona Lisa’s smile was ‘edited’ instead of her being changed to an African woman called Moana Lezza with dreadlocks. The changes are intended to be subtle to our reality. I know someone will throw geographic or human anatomy changes on me. Again those are very specific and subtle where someone could easily label it as confabulation or false memory. They also can easily be explained with the editing of one reality when you realise we’re not floating on a ball of water through the universe. That’s another post in itself and not something I want to get into here. Pls do your research. Life is far closer to the Truman show or Westworld than it is Star Wars.
There’s a reason why Europe wasn’t changed to ‘The new Roman Empire’ or ‘Uropia’. Again it would be too obvious. People do experience personal effects but those are not engineered changes to our reality, they’re anecdotal glitches to your personal reality. The double slit experiment proves how reality changes once we observe it, so many of these personal changes could be directly related to this truth.
So why am I posting this? I always felt like these dots seemed rather easy to connect whereas many are often looking for the mainstream explanation, perhaps because their brain needs to make sense of things through the tools they’ve been provided, perhaps because they haven’t thought deeply enough about the effect.
The main proof we are not living in parallel universes is residue. If we moved to a new reality you would not be finding hundreds of old newspaper articles calling it Berenstein or Chic fil a. They wouldn’t exist because in this current universe we’re inhabiting, they never existed. These are well thought out, specific and meticulously planned edits to our one reality. I’ve written more about this here
Also look at how specific each change is. The Ford logo change, the kit-kat losing its dash change, the dogs playing poker visor missing, Oscar Meyer to Mayer, Caldwell banker to Coldwell, Carl Budding to Buddig, Gordon’s fish sticks to Gorton’s, Depends to Depend diapers, Cheez-itz to Cheez-it, Draino, Haagen Dazs, Smithsonian, I’ll be bach to back, interview with a vampire, little tykes to tikes, A-1 steak sauce to A.I, pikachu black tip of tail, Onyx to Onix, Cliff notes to cliffs notes, Vlassic, Klaussen, Spaulding to Spalding, Haas to Hass etc etc.
Do people see how subtle each of these changes are? Imagine if Pikachu was spelled Pokeaflu and was completely red coloured instead of yellow. Too big a change right? Imagine if Kit-kat changed to Kitty$Kat. Too big a change again. These changes all have an obvious intelligence behind them. Someone or something is choosing massive brands, the biggest lines from our most popular movies (mirror mirror, fly my pretties fly, if you build it they will come, I’m out of order, you’re out of order, hello Clarice etc), the most recognised art pieces in history (Mona Lisa, Henry 8th turkey leg, the thinker) and other mass cultural events and shifts to make their point.
Why didn’t they just change the dogs playing poker to cats playing monopoly with no dogs playing poker ever existing? Because it would be too obvious, so they went with the visor change instead. Even a massive effect like Shazam still has people questioning their memories to see if they’re conflating it with Kazaam and Shaq. It’s called subtlety.
They did mess up with a few effects. First one was the Apollo 13 line ‘Houston we have a problem’. For a period of time, thousands of people all over the world watched that video say ‘Houston we’ve had a problem’. The comments on that clip were absolutely insane until the controlled channel deleted and reuploaded the video, perhaps under the pressure of some nefarious forces. Now that change could’ve been on purpose but the true reason behind it we’ll probably never know until someone comes forth with more information.
I think they pushed their luck with the fruit of the loom cornucopia, judge judy’s gavel, Richard Simmons headband, Bruce Springsteen album cover changing from bandana to baseball cap and a few others where the changes were so severe. But again, that’s because I was familiar with all of those things. What if I wasn’t? Then I could easily just explain them as false memories.
Another time they made errors in the editing process was with Dolly’s braces in moonraker. On all clips and even personal vhs tapes, you can see a white glitch over her mouth occur at the pertinent scene. You can see her braces reflect in her drinking glass in another scene and metal in the right edge of her mouth from another angle. This is residue of their editing process which was not refined enough at the time.
Or perhaps they left the residue for us intentionally. It looks like an edit that went wrong or some indication that the original footage was manipulated. This demonstrated to me a lot of flaws in the editing process which seems to have become more refined as time has passed. That begs the deeper question. Was any of this residue organically created or was it all left for us to discover on purpose?
Why us? Why is everyone else around us including our family and friends so oblivious to what is happening? However egotistical it sounds, it’s because they’re not at a level of awareness to even conceive of these theories. People can only meet you as deeply as they’ve met themselves. Remember that. Most haven’t dared to meet themselves on even a level beyond mainstream, fear mongering, commercial reality. What makes you think they’ll be able to understand the complexities of the effect?
One last thing. Even geographical changes like the movement of South America east or anatomy changes like the liver moving its position can be explained by editing. Imagine you’re a programmer for GTA5. You can edit a store name from Quicksave to Quicksaves just as easily as you could edit the physical makeup of the avatars in your game or the entire map itself. You could edit the GTA map and this wouldn’t indicate that the avatar has switched universes, it would imply the editors of the game changed the map through their own software.
Here is one last edit that went wrong which I think is one of the best pieces of residue out there. The JC Penny change. Look how both spellings exist in the same old advert. Courtesy of u/nathanielhebert.
Anyway that’s what the editors of our ‘game’ are doing. They’re changing everything and with a specific reason. We’re just not quite sure what that reason is yet. These are not organic random changes. Pls look at the subtle intelligence behind them.
Thanks for reading.
submitted by AncientLineage to Retconned [link] [comments]

$Tell DD Long Term Outlook and Value Proposition

Update 1/28/2021 - Thank you for the comments and feedback. I've updated the post to include the notes. Had posted in pennystock, but we'll soon be leaving that and investing. I'll focus on r Stock going forward. Links at bottom of reference posts.
Below is a recap of why I believe whole-heartedly in Tellurian and the potential growth in this company. As full disclosure and being transparent, I currently hold 119k shares. I began buying Tell at the COVID crash in the .70s. I've wheeled options while rolling money into shares as I've gone. It's been an emotional roller coaster (especially October dips) In one year I started with 60k YOLO and now I'm at 417k at Friday, Jan. 22 close. Even with the recent growth in the last 30 days, this is just the beginning for Tell.
I could make this post a college essay, but I'll aim to keep it short and to the point.
Who is Tellurian Inc?
"Tellurian Inc (TELL) is a liquefied natural gas (LNG) development company headquartered in Houston, TX. TELL plans to develop a 27.6 mtpa LNG terminal with five plants near Lake Charles, LA, as well as upstream assets and pipeline infrastructure. The initial phase will likely include 3 plants (16.6 mtpa capacity). The Driftwood project will be financed by equity customepartners as well as project debt financing. Tellurian will own 28%-42% of Driftwood Holdings and 100% of Tellurian Marketing."
Why Tellurian?
Tellurian is a market disruptor with their proposed Driftwood Project, which will make them the first end-to-end (well for the production company, pipeline network for transportation, terminal LNG for exporting) exporter with an at-cost LNG acquisition independent of domestic Henry Hub (HH) as they'll be selling primarily on Japanese Korean Marker (JKM) at this time.
HH - https://www.cmegroup.com/trading/energy/natural-gas/natural-gas.html
JKM - https://www.cmegroup.com/trading/energy/natural-gas/lng-japan-korea-marker-platts-swap.html
Driftwood Project has received federal permits and is 30% engineered. Capital will be funded by equity partners, most likely long-term buyers of future LNG. The equity partner will receive future contracts for at-cost LNG in exchange for the front load of capital. Current partners already include Total and GE. $5B capital is needed for the Final Investment Decision (FID).
*** Link to Tell's latest presentation: https://www.tellurianinc.com/news-and-presentations/new-corporate-presentation-2/corporate-presentation_tellurian_january-2021_final/
Current assets include:
Haynesville Gas Production Well to supply gas. 10,067 net acres and 71 producing wells.
Driftwood LNG LLC, owned by Tellurian Inc., is developing a liquefied natural gas (LNG) production and export terminal on the west bank of the Calcasieu River, south of Lake Charles, Louisiana.
Driftwood plans to deliver LNG < $3.50/mmBtu. ($3.50/mmBtu FOB LNG price < $2.00 gas delivery + < $0.75 opex + < $0.75 debt service)
The value proposition to equity partners is $5 JKM to realize ROI.
All-Star Management
Tellurian has 2 of 3 pioneer LNG founders that developed the largest Natural Gas companies.
Charif Souki - Chairman - LNG Godfather and Legend, who was the founder of Cheniere Energy in 1996. If they can do it once, they can do it again.
Octávio M.C Simoes - CEO - "Previously, he was President and CEO of Sempra LNG & Midstream where he was responsible for all LNG and natural gas midstream activities in Sempra’s efforts to develop, build and operate liquefied natural gas (LNG) receipt terminals, liquefaction facilities, natural gas pipelines and storage facilities."
Cheniere Energy (LNG) - https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/LNG/
LNG
Over the next decade, there will be a large difference in demand to supply for LNG as countries transition from Coal/Nuclear to "cleaner renewable" sources from a combination of both natural gas and renewables will make up 74% of the energy landscape. In addition to the domestic shortage of natural gas with the number of offshore rigs shut down during COVID. Even if they turned them on, it would be 1-2 years before production would be online again. Tell will be exporting to Asian LNG market (JKM) and European LNG market (TTF) where local markets for natural gas extraction are limited and will rely on imports from providers such as Tell.
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/pdf/AEO2020%20Natural%20Gas.pdf
LNG will be the source for heat/cooling as it will be used for power generation including all those EVs and Tesla's that need to charge from the grid.
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/pdf/AEO2020%20Electricity.pdf
Give Planet of the Humans documentary a watch. It's on Youtube or Prime. Good explanation of LNG's role over the next 25 years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet_of_the_Humans
Price Targets
1/21/2021 - Wolfe Research - PT $5.00
At max capacity, Tell valuation would be 100B made by Souki the chairman. Break down the math from there. Tell will retain 40% of capacity for themselves.
2021 - February = $4-$6 (1B valuation / 329M shares)
2021 - March/April = $8-$12 - Deals announced gap up (3B valuation / 329M shares)
2021 - May/June or FID announced = $15-$20 - 5B in capital in (5B valuation / 329M shares)
2023 = $45 at Phase 1 Project completion (15B in valuation / 329M shares). Note: I would expect 1 year delay to 2024 due to hurricanes or natural events.
Mid-decade will see a peak in Demand/Supply pricing where LNG company's valuations could get frothy, much like early to mid-2000s with oil peaks.
Future: 40% capacity equals $80 a share
Future: 100% capacity equals $130 a share
Max would be 100B valuation / 329M shares at $300. Equity partners could comprise 40%-60% of equity that would eat into total available shares.

Crosslinks with Stock being the main post.
Main - https://www.reddit.com/stocks/comments/l4d6ng/tellurian_tell_dd_long_term_outlook_and_value/
https://www.reddit.com/pennystocks/comments/l4d681/tellurian_tell_dd_long_term_outlook_and_value/
https://www.reddit.com/investing/comments/l4822k/tell_dd_long_term_outlook_and_value_proposition/
submitted by V3Capital to investing [link] [comments]

How likely is every NFL stadium to host WrestleMania? An investigation

With the announcements of WrestleManias 37, 38, and 39, some users were critical of WWE selecting the same venues every year. Every WrestleMania since 23, with the exception of three in Orlando (two at the Citrus Bowl/Camping World Stadium and one at the Performance Center due to COVID-19), has been held at an NFL stadium. As something of an NFL stadium expert, I decided to examine each NFL stadium's likelihood of hosting a future WrestleMania. Please note that some stadiums are located just outside of the city limits listed, but I listed the major city most associated with it (so for instance, while AT&T Stadium is technically in Arlington, it hosts the Dallas Cowboys, so I listed Arlington.) I'm also giving WWE a significant benefit of the doubt and assuming they'd be interested in hosting a Mania outside of their usual go-tos.
Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas, NV
Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, MO
AT&T Stadium, Dallas, TX
Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, NC
Bills Stadium, Buffalo, NY
Empower Field at Mile High, Denver, CO
FedExField, Washington, DC (stadium located in Landover, MD)
FirstEnergy Stadium, Cleveland, OH
Ford Field, Detroit, MI
Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, MA
Hard Rock Stadium, Miami, FL
Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, PA
Lambeau Field, Green Bay, WI
Levi's Stadium, Santa Clara, CA
Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, PA
Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, IN
Lumen Field, Seattle, WA
M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MD
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GA
Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans, LA
MetLife Stadium, New York, NY (located in East Rutherford, NJ)
Nissan Stadium, Nashville, TN
NRG Stadium, Houston, TX
Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati, OH
Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, FL
SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
Soldier Field, Chicago, IL
State Farm Stadium, Phoenix, AZ
TIAA Bank Field, Jacksonville, FL
US Bank Stadium, Minneapolis, MN
submitted by iamnotacola to SquaredCircle [link] [comments]

Tellurian $Tell Long Term Investment Outlook and Value Proposition

Update 2/9/2021 - Added additional sources for future energy consumption and tweaks to price targets.
Update 1/29/2021 - Mods removed this post from Reddit WSB and stocks. I figure it was time to launch a subreddit for this great company that we're invested in. Thank you for visiting, please Join our sub-reddit. We're going to have FUN this year!!
Update 1/28/2021 - Thank you for the comments and discussion. I've updated the post to include the feedback.

Who is Tellurian Inc?
"Tellurian Inc (TELL) is a liquefied natural gas (LNG) development company headquartered in Houston, TX. TELL plans to develop a 27.6 mtpa LNG terminal with five plants near Lake Charles, LA, as well as upstream assets and pipeline infrastructure. The initial phase will likely include 3 plants (16.6 mtpa capacity). The Driftwood project will be financed by equity customers/partners as well as project debt financing. Tellurian will own 28%-42% of Driftwood Holdings and 100% of Tellurian Marketing."
Why Tellurian?
Tellurian is a market disruptor with their proposed Driftwood Project, which will make them the first end-to-end (well for the production company, pipeline network for transportation, terminal LNG for exporting) exporter with an at-cost LNG acquisition independent of domestic Henry Hub (HH) as they'll be selling primarily on Japanese Korean Marker (JKM) at this time.
HH - https://www.cmegroup.com/trading/energy/natural-gas/natural-gas.html
JKM - https://www.cmegroup.com/trading/energy/natural-gas/lng-japan-korea-marker-platts-swap.html
Driftwood Project has received federal permits and is 30% engineered. Capital will be funded by equity partners, most likely long-term buyers of future LNG. The equity partner will receive future contracts for at-cost LNG in exchange for the front load of capital. Current partners already include Total and GE. $5B capital is needed for the Final Investment Decision (FID).
*** Link to Tell's latest presentation: https://www.tellurianinc.com/news-and-presentations/new-corporate-presentation-2/corporate-presentation_tellurian_january-2021_final/
Current assets include:
Haynesville Gas Production Well to supply gas. 10,067 net acres and 71 producing wells.
Driftwood LNG LLC, owned by Tellurian Inc., is developing a liquefied natural gas (LNG) production and export terminal on the west bank of the Calcasieu River, south of Lake Charles, Louisiana.
Driftwood plans to deliver LNG < $3.50/mmBtu. ($3.50/mmBtu FOB LNG price < $2.00 gas delivery + < $0.75 opex + < $0.75 debt service)
The value proposition to equity partners is $5 JKM to realize ROI.
All-Star Management
Tellurian has 2 of 3 pioneer LNG founders that developed the largest Natural Gas companies.
Charif Souki - Chairman - LNG Godfather and Legend, who was the founder of Cheniere Energy in 1996. If they can do it once, they can do it again.
Octávio M.C Simoes - CEO - "Previously, he was President and CEO of Sempra LNG & Midstream where he was responsible for all LNG and natural gas midstream activities in Sempra’s efforts to develop, build and operate liquefied natural gas (LNG) receipt terminals, liquefaction facilities, natural gas pipelines and storage facilities."
Cheniere Energy (LNG) - https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/LNG/
LNG
Over the next decade, there will be a large difference in demand to supply for LNG as countries transition from Coal/Nuclear to "cleaner renewable" sources from a combination of both natural gas and renewables will make up 74% of the energy landscape. In addition to the domestic shortage of natural gas with the number of offshore rigs shut down during COVID. Even if they turned them on, it would be 1-2 years before production would be online again. Tell will be exporting to Asian LNG market (JKM) and European LNG market (TTF) where local markets for natural gas extraction are limited and will rely on imports from providers such as Tell.
https://www.naturalgasintel.com/eia-predicts-record-high-u-s-oil-natural-gas-output-through-2050/
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/pdf/AEO2020%20Natural%20Gas.pdf
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/pdf/AEO2020%20Electricity.pdf
“Liquefied natural gas exporters
Given the unprecedented wave of LNG projects taking final investment decisions (FIDs) in 2018 and 2019, the global LNG market is expected to have surplus capacity for the next four to five years. In the second wave of LNG exports, more than 20 North American projects are competing to take FIDs, but only a few are likely to succeed. Those that can deliver LNG to Asia for no more than $7 per MMBTU have the best prospects, and those that secure privileged access to upstream gas resources can increase their projects’ cost competitiveness.”
This is the perfect example of the value in Telluriam and Driftwood Pipeline. Capitalize on being the only end-to-end exporter and ROI at $5 per MMBTU.
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/electric-power-and-natural-gas/our-insights/the-future-of-natural-gas-in-north-america
Give Planet of the Humans documentary a watch. It's on Youtube or Prime. Good explanation of LNG's role over the next 25 years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet_of_the_Humans
Price Targets
$1.50 just in asset valuation - Acquisition of Magellan Petroleum Corporation (Haynesville Gas Production Well) is valued between $400-$500 million / 329M shares = $1.50
1/21/2021 - Wolfe Research - PT $5.00
1/29/2021 - Double Moving Average Crossover (21-week 50-week) - Bullish
At max capacity, Tell valuation would be 100B made by Souki the chairman. Break down the math from there. Tell will retain 40% of capacity for themselves.
2021 - February = $4-$6 (1B valuation / 329M shares)
2021 - March/April = $8-$12 - Deals announced gap up (3B valuation / 329M shares)
2021 - May/June or FID announced = $15-$20 - 5B in capital in (5B valuation / 329M shares)
2023 = $45 at Phase 1 Project completion (15B in valuation / 329M shares). Note: I would expect 1 year delay to 2024 due to hurricanes or natural events.
2025/2026/Mid-decade will see a peak in Demand/Supply pricing where LNG company's valuations could get frothy, much like early to mid-2000s with oil peaks.
Future: 40% capacity equals $80 a share
Future: 100% capacity equals $130 a share
Max would be 100B valuation / 329M shares at $300. Equity partners could comprise 40%-60% of equity that would eat into total available shares.

Crosslinks from other subreddit posts before the creation of the TellurianLNG community reddit.
https://www.reddit.com/pennystocks/comments/l4d681/tellurian_tell_dd_long_term_outlook_and_value/
https://www.reddit.com/investing/comments/l4822k/tell_dd_long_term_outlook_and_value_proposition/
submitted by V3Capital to TellurianLNG [link] [comments]

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