Sports Columnists 안전놀이터
I trust Bradley Chubb. I have zero faith in Bradley Chubb's lower leg. Or then again his shoulder. Or then again his left knee. Or on the other hand, in the meantime, the football divine beings.
On the off chance that Colorado State tight end Trey McBride is off the board - and he ought to be - when the Broncos come up at pick No. 64 in the NFL draft, then, at that point, get me a pass-rusher.
Something like one more. A decent one. An attendant. Somebody who doesn't simply push Chubb, novice Randy Gregory and Malik Reed. A man who can ultimately supplant one of them.
Someone who makes No. 55 an extravagance instead of fundamental. Track down me the Shaq Barrett of The Russell Wilson Era. A youngster who's young, modest and hungry like a tiger shark.
"We worked out in better places, however I know from previous years that the person that he is, the person we realize that he will generally be, he'll invest the energy consistently," Reed, the Broncos' approachable and reasonable external linebacker, let The Post Tuesday know when gotten some information about Chubb's wellbeing. "I know his (objective is) about progress, (to be) the best form of himself."
Which we've seen, yet too darn momentarily to be relied upon. Chubb, the No. 5 generally speaking pick in the 2018 draft, has arrived at the midpoint of 8.3 games per season since the fall of 2019. He's been in on over 78% of the Broncos' guarded snaps over that stretch only a single time (93%, 2019).
Sacred dread. Enjoyable to watch. Not solid.
Randy Gregory, whom Broncos GM George Paton inked to a five-year, $70 million arrangement last month, has arrived at the midpoint of 12 appearances a season since '19. He's played on over 53% of the Cowboys' protective snaps only a single time (55%, 2021) over the last three pre-winters.