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By Marc Lawrence
Monday, April 27

THANKFUL
MLC

You can’t blame Shedeur Sanders for not wanting to mark the first anniversary of his inglorious slide in the 2025 NFL Draft by rehashing what, how and why it all happened.

It’s 2026 now and the second-year Cleveland Browns quarterback was in no mood to deeply reflect on the most embarrassing episode of his life as he met with the media following a minicamp practice on Tuesday.

“I’m thankful that everything happened how it happened,” Sanders said.

A quick press conference stat: Sanders mentioned the word “thankful” nine times in one response after someone asked what stood out from his experience of the past year.

Talk about messaging. We get it. And that’s no knock. I’m convinced that Sanders genuinely recognizes gratitude as essential for his soul.

"I don’t look at anything as a negative,” he added. “When you start looking at things as a negative, that’s when you grow spite and hatred, you know, and nothing positive comes out of that.

“I’m blessed. I was in a position to where I can handle everything that comes my way. So, now I feel bulletproof.”

And he got his Colorado number back.

Good for you, No. 2.

ON TODAY'S SCORECARD
Report Cards

MLC

Nobody is as astute on the NFL that Nate Davis of USA TODAY. His with and insight are second to none. Here are his grades for the NFL Draft...

It’s time for that annual labor of love – or maybe indulgence, or maybe simply a fool's errand given the nature of our instant gratification culture. Nevertheless, he’s breaking out that digital red pen − at least three years before it’s remotely fair to evaluate any of the players taken in the 2026 NFL Draft or the teams that picked them − and issuing post-draft report cards, which aren’t even informed by progress reports, because I know you want and demand them. Furthermore, all 32 are (prematurely) ranked for your added enjoyment.

One note about the methodology: As I grade each team, the goal is to pull back for a bigger-picture look at its performance holistically rather than judging from a narrow perspective that doesn't include trades and other considerations that more accurately frame its draft decisions.

With that in mind, here are your ridiculously hasty 2026 NFL draft grades, the individual classes ranked best to worst:  A team that also needs to progress with a significant cultural shift, was also probably wise to bring in Cooper and Ponds fresh off their championship run at Indiana. Admittedly, the Jets have “won” offseasons before, but it's time to find out if potential starts translating to a much better product on the field.

1. New York Jets: A+

It felt like Part 1 of a summer blockbuster, the highly anticipated draft sequel – generally and specifically to the NYJ – still a year away. But if things unfold as nicely in 2027 as well as Gang Green’s haul seemed to go this year, then New York should actually be a legitimate playoff contender by 2028 … or so. But OLB David Bailey, the second overall pick, TE Kenyon Sadiq, WR Omar Cooper and CB D’Angelo Ponds all project as immediate starters – Ponds and Sadiq both arriving courtesy of trades GM Darren Mougey made at last year’s November deadline. Even fourth-round QB Cade Klubnik could get an extended audition at some point this season – think Davis Mills in Houston. A team that also needs to progress with a significant cultural shift, was also probably wise to bring in Cooper and Ponds fresh off their championship run at Indiana. Admittedly, the Jets have “won” offseasons before, but it's time to find out if potential starts translating to a much better product on the field.

2. Las Vegas Raiders: A

It didn’t take a genius to pick QB Fernando Mendoza No. 1 overall (sorry, Spytek), but he will obviously define this draft through his ability to lift – or not – this long-suffering franchise out of a decades-long quagmire. But getting players like DB Treydan Stukes (second round), CB Jermod McCoy (fourth) and RB Mike Washington Jr. (fifth) is quite the needed talent infusion – the gamble on McCoy and his highly scrutinized knee atop Round 4 a calculated risk with too much upside to bypass. It’s almost like getting the extra first-round pick the Silver and Black sought earlier this year while getting to keep DE Maxx Crosby.

3. New York Giants: A

Whether or not OLB Arvell Reese fell to fifth overall, he could eventually develop into this draft’s best overall player and one who justifies the widespread comparisons to Micah Parsons. Perhaps. Maybe. Acquiring the 10th pick from Cincinnati for Pro Bowl DL Dexter Lawrence (and his salary) last weekend, ultimately in exchange for OL Francis Mauigoa – arguably the draft’s best tackle – seems like another win for Big Blue. Getting CB Colton Hood (Round 2) and WR Malachi Fields (Round 3) on Day 2 project as relative value picks. New coach John Harbaugh could have this squad fighting for a playoff return in short order.

4. Cleveland Browns: A

The pre-draft perception – for whatever that’s ever worth – was that the Browns couldn't wait long to get more needed bodies for both the offensive line and the receiver room. Yet GM Andrew Berry, who seemingly hit last year’s draft out of the park, seemed to agree, getting two blockers and two WRs among this first five selections (the fifth guy in that cluster being second-round S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, whom Berry aggressively moved up to rescue at No. 58). But first-round OL Spencer Fano, first-round WR KC Concepcion (obtained thanks to last year’s Travis Hunter deal) and second-round WR Denzel Boston all project as immediate starters for a team that seems similar to the Jets in some respects – amassing talent while determining who the franchise QB is (unless sixth-rounder Taylen Green proves Brady-esque, which he certainly isn’t physically given his size-speed quotient) – though Cleveland’s rebuild seems well ahead of New York’s. Your move, Shedeur see Marc’s Opening atop this page..

5. Seattle Seahawks: A-

GM John Schneider, who loves to accrue draft capital (often at the expense of premium selections) entered the draft with a league-low four picks, then – somewhat stunningly – did the stick-and-pick thing in Rounds 1 and 2, taking RB Jadarian Price and S Bud Clark, respectively. Both players could and should play a lot as rookies, both due to their draft status and the players Seattle lost in free agency, namely Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III and S Coby Bryant. Yet Schneider still managed to wheel and deal his way into doubling his crop into eight picks. This is how champions are built, two times over now in Schneider’s case with two completely different rosters, an NFL anomaly for a GM.

6. Philadelphia Eagles: A-

They jumped the Steelers for slot receiver extraordinaire Makai Lemon 20th overall as Pittsburgh was on the phone with the Cowboys, about to complete a trade for Lemon when Howie Roseman made a last-second call. Second-round TE Eli Stowers projects as quite a weapon, even if he’s ultimately a plus-sized receiver. Mammoth fourth-round OT Markel Bell might inherit RT Lane Johnson’s job one day − soon. And leave it to EVP/GM Roseman – the guy is everywhere - to also acquire a Pro Bowl pass rusher (Jonathan Greenard) at the cost of two third-rounders. WR A.J. Brown is almost certainly soon be a goner, while presumably fetching prized 2027 draft assets, but Philly seems pretty well positioned to evolve effectively without him.

Click here to view Nate Davis’s entire 2026 NFL Draft First Round Grades results.


GRINDING OUT THE PROFITS
Irish Eyes Are Crying

Moving forward, the ‘Grinding Out the Profits’ section in the Coffee Club will share exclusive insight into the 2026 College Football season directly from the 2026 Playbook Football Preview Guide magazine. Check out today’s insight:

Notre Dame – Snubbed, Pissed, Primed

Furious. Motivated. Dangerous. Take your choice. After riding the Top 10 all season, only to get CFP-snubbed, the Irish check every box. Not only does Notre Dame return with a massive chip on their shoulder, it’s also the nation’s No. 1 returning production per ESPN. That’s a dangerous 1-2 punch. Marcus Freeman’s squad reloads with elite skill-position depth, a breakout-ready CJ Carr at quarterback, and a loaded defense. Yes, they lose explosive backs Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price – a rare pair of first rounders - yet experience, talent, and fury remain in abundance in South Bend. Get ready for a massive middle finger.

STAT YOU WILL LIKE:

The Dame’s 70-point explosion against Syracuse last season was their highest since the poll era in 1936.

POINTSPREAD POWER PLAY:
Play On: vs. Miami Fla (11/7)

TRENDING TODAY
MLC

The NFL draft has concluded. What did we learn from the draft, other than varying opinion on which team had the best, or the worst, draft?

Two first-round picks don’t make you good overnight…but they almost always make you better.

Here’s one thing I know for sure, from my Well-Oiled Machine:

______________________

BREAKING NEWS:

TEAMS WITH 2 OR MORE
FIRST ROUND PICKS

have shown dramatic improvement from the previous season to the next.

______________________

The facts are, since 2000, NFL teams with 2+ first-round picks that won

7 or fewer games the prior season improved by an average

+2.0 wins per team; 70% improved overall; and 47% jumped by 3+ wins.

That should put these seven qualifying teams in a better light this season:

Cleveland Dallas Kansas City Miami NY Giants, NY Jets, and Tennessee.

And now you know.

__________________________________

Note: The feature above is from the all-new PLAYBOOK DID YOU KNOW column. It’s a short treatise on that will be appearing in my “BETCHA DIDN’T KNOW Substack” column – coming soon.



MLC


STAT OF THE DAY
1713-1

NBA teams were 1713-1 when leading by 6 or more in the last 30 seconds of regulation in the playoffs in the last 29 years. They are now 1713-2 as the Rockets are the 2nd
team in 29 years to blow a 6+ point
lead in the final 30 seconds of
regulation, joining the 2024 Knicks.


BREWED AWAKENING

Stand By Me

In case you were wondering, MLB’s Automatic Ball-Stirke Challenge System is holding up well.

Remember. This is not a full "robot ump" system that calls every pitch. Human umpires still make the initial ball/strike calls. Players can challenge them using technology and Challenges per team limited to 2 per game (first 9 innings). Successful challenges are retained; unsuccessful ones are lost.

Only the batter, pitcher, or catcher can challenge (by tapping their helmet/hat immediately after the call). No coaches/managers.

Nearly 1,000 challenges in the first few weeks, with ~55% overturned.

Teams have shown ~61% success rate in very early games.

It's been a big hit with fans (must-see moments on the Jumbotron) and generally positive with players. Commissioner Rob Manfred called the reception “overwhelmingly positive.”

This system adds strategy, reduces bad calls in key moments, and keeps the human element intact. MLB has dashboards and trackers live on MLB.com and ESPN for real-time stats.

Early 2026 Stats (through 3-4 weeks) -

  • Overall success rate: 54-55% overturned.

  • Batters: 46% success.

  • Fielders (pitchers/catchers): 60% success (catchers especially strong early on).

  • Over 1,600 challenges issued so far, with hundreds overturned.

  • Catchers have been the stars of the system (high success on borderline low pitches).

  • Umpires under extra scrutiny; debates about the exact zone vs. traditional framing; rare tech glitches (very low occurrence).

It's added strategy, entertainment, and accuracy without killing the human element. The system is here to stay for the regular season and playoffs.

So, yes. It’s been a success thus far.


PERCOLATING

Stand By Me

From longtime Coffee Club regular Stormin’ Norman...

Barefoot, dressed in a Baltimore Ravens short-sleeved T-shirt and black sweatpants, former Phillies center fielder and 1993 WS spark plug Lenny Dykstra — nicknamed “Nails” during his playing days for his bulldozing style on and off the diamond — let his body go limp.

Steamtown Church pastor Dennis D’Augostine then dunked the three-time Phillies All-Star backward into a Jacuzzi-size pool of holy water while the congregation behind them applauded and cheered.

I got the best teammate ever now. That teammate is God, you know?” Dykstra, a Scranton resident for several years, told The Inquirer in a phone interview 10 days after his first baptism. “I’ve had a lot of good things happen in my life. This is something I’m most proud of.”

This baptism was a few months removed from a New Year’s Eve arrest, when he was charged with two misdemeanor drug counts after a traffic stop in a remote stretch of northeastern Pennsylvania.

Stand by your teammate, Lenny. Please, stand by your teammate.


QUOTE OF THE DAY

"As we move to the end of our fourth quarter... The belief is the need for peace and a safe loving place to be."

- A dear friend

MLC

Order yours today before they are gone!

 


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