Complete List of 2024 Blue Bomber Draft picks.

Started by ModAdmin, May 01, 2024, 03:58:37 AM

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ModAdmin

GLOBAL Players picked...

#8 Fabian Weitz - LB, 6'0" 220 lbs. from Cologne, Germany

#17 Lucky Ogbevoen - DB, 6'2" 223 lbs.

DRAFT players picked...

#13, Kevens Clercius, WR, UCONN.  6'2", 217 lbs.  Known as an elite ST player, and is known for doing the dirty work well  in blocking. 

#14, Michael Chris-Ike, RB/FB, Delaware State.  6'1", 225 lbs.  A large, fast player.  Known for brute force and speedy cuts, his vision has been questioned.  A durable backup for Brady, but expected to be an immediate special teams player in the mold of Mike Miller.

#17, Gabe Wallace, OL, Buffalo.  6'6", 305 lbs.  Was originally projected at #3.  A mean, hard-nosed big body road-grader who can play guard or tackle.  Favorite player growing up in BC was Adam Bighill.

#20, Kyle Samson, DT, UBC.  6'3", 290 lbs..  2X Academic All Canadian, 2X All Canadian, 2X All Star. 34 reps on the bench on his pro day.  Reputation as a run-stuffer with a great motor.

#37, Ian Leroux, LS, Laval.  6'1" 225 lbs.  Mike Benson's protege?

#40, Ethan Kalra, OL, Waterloo.  6'2". 305 lbs.

#46, Giovanni Manu, OL, UBC.  6'8", 340 lbs..   Drafted by the Detroit Lions in the 4th round of the NFL draft.  A low price to pay If he ever makes it to the CFL, he could be impressive.

#55 Abdul-Karim Gassama - Manitoba 5'8" 158 lbs.

#64 Michael Vlahogiannis - McGill, OL 6'3" 312 lbs.

#73 Owen Hubert - McMaster, DL  6'4" 263 lbs.
"You can't let praise or criticism get to you. It's a weakness to get caught up in either one." - John Wooden

ModAdmin

Meet the 2024 Draft Class

They were already one of the toughest and meanest outfits in the entire Canadian Football League, long considered dominant along both sides of the line of scrimmage and perennially gritty on special teams.

And now — courtesy Tuesday's CFL Draft — the Winnipeg Blue Bombers just added a whole lot of nasties to an already ornery roster.

The Blue Bombers added to their homegrown talent depth with 11 selections, although they ultimately had to wait to make their first pick. Winnipeg flipped their first-round pick, eighth overall, to the Calgary Stampeders – along with third-round selection, 28th overall – for the 13th and 14th overall selections. That meant the Blue Bombers had four picks in the second round at 13, 14, plus the 17th and 20th overall selections they already had.

Through the first two rounds Blue Bombers took University of Connecticut receiver Kevens Clercius 13th overall, running back Michael Chris-Ike of Delaware State at 14, University of Buffalo offensive lineman Gabe Wallace at 17 and UBC defensive tackle Kyle Samson at 20th overall.

They then added a long snapper in Ian Leroux of Laval 37th overall, O-lineman Ethan Kalra of Waterloo at 40th overall – using the extra fifth-round selection through the Dru Brown trade to Ottawa in January – and then Giovanni Manu, the 6-6, 352-pound man mountain of an O-lineman who was drafted in fourth round pick by the Detroit Lions last weekend.

The club then went local by grabbing University of Manitoba receiver A.K. Gassama 55th overall, then McGill O-lineman Michael Vlahogiannis in the seventh round, 64th overall, and McMaster defensive end Owen Hubert in the eighth round, 73rd overall.

All added up, that's four offensive linemen, two receivers and defensive linemen, and one running back and long snapper added to the club's Canadian cupboard. Nine of the 10 picks – all but Manu – are expected to be at the club's rookie camp beginning next week on May 8th.

Earlier in the day the club also added two global prospects in the CFL Global Draft in German linebacker Fabian Weitz and Austrian defensive back/linebacker Lucky Ogbevoen.

GM Kyle Walters is to meet with the media Wednesday morning to provide more detail about the club's 2024 draft. In the meantime, here's a more detailed look at the newest Blue Bombers:

THE NEW BLUE CREW

Kevens Clercius

Selected: Round 2, 13th overall
Position: receiver
School: Connecticut
Ht: 6-2; Wt: 212

Notable: Tough player from a tough neighbourhood in Montreal, the son of Haitian immigrants... Lost his mother to illness at age 14... Landed a scholarship at UConn and arrived speaking almost no English but enrolled in language classes before school started... Appeared in 37 games over three years with the Huskies, pulling in 49 passes for 604 yards and five TDs.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: He's got the size and grit to make an impact right away on special teams and potentially fill the 'dirty work' role Rasheed Bailey did so well with the offence as a blocker at the line and downfield.

Michael Chris-Ike

Selected: Round 2, 14th overall
Position: running back
School: Delaware State
Ht: 6-1; Wt: 225

Notable: Has earned a rookie-camp invite with the New York Jets in the next couple of weeks... Did not carry the ball a lot at Delaware State, with just 14 touches last year for 90 yards... Tied for the fastest 40 time at the CFL Combine at 4.51 with DB Benjamin Labrosse (drafted by Calgary fourth overall).

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: He gives them added depth behind CFL Most Outstanding Canadian Brady Oliveira and Johnny Augustine but is another tough dude with good size and speed who should contribute immediately on special teams and, perhaps, be an option to fill the fullback spot.

Gabe Wallace

Selected: Round 2, 17th overall
Position: offensive line
School: Buffalo
Ht: 6-6; Wt: 344

Notable: Posted great numbers at the University of Buffalo pro day, including a 29.5-inch vertical which, as pointed out by John Hodge of 3Down Nation, was higher than 23 OL at the NFL Combine this spring. He also threw up 29 reps at the bench press... Dressed for 49 games at Buffalo, including 28 games at guard, seven at left tackle and two games at right tackle.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: He was called a 'big mauler' and a 'road grader' by TSN analysts Duane Forde and Jim Barker and that makes him a perfect fit in an O-line room already stacked with those types. Two Canadian starters in Chris Kolankowski and Pat Neufeld are in their 30s and give this guy some time with the best O-line coach in the CFL in Marty Costello and he could blossom.

Kyle Samson

Selected: Round 2, 20th overall
Position: defensive tackle
School: UBC
Ht: 6-3; Wt: 290

Notable: Played in 33 games over four seasons with the T-Birds, with eight sacks, 47 solo tackles, one interception, 19.5 tackles for loss and three pass knockdowns... A foot injury prevented him from being a full participant at the UBC pro day, but he did throw up 34 reps in the bench press... A two-time U Sports Second Team All-Canadian.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: The club is loaded at defensive tackle with veterans Jake Thomas and Cam Lawson, with Tanner Schmekel and Collin Kornelson from last year's draft class.

Ian Leroux

Selected: Round 4, 37th overall
Position: long snapper
School: Laval
Ht: 6-1; Wt: 225

Notable: Was a defensive captain at Laval and considered the best long snapper by many in this class... Vanier Cup champion in 2022.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: Mike Benson has a lock on this job, but as consistent as he is, he's also 36. Leroux will come to camp, learn from one of the CFL's best, and then head back to Laval. That gives the club a long-snapping heir apparent in their stable of Canadian talent.

Ethan Kalra

Selected: Round 5, 40th overall
Position: offensive line
School: Waterloo
Ht: 6-2; Wt: 309

Notable: Earned an invite to the main CFL Combine in Winnipeg after a solid showing at the Invitational Combine in Waterloo... Had 29 career starts with the Warriors, mostly at guard.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: Enters camp under essentially the same circumstances as Wallace, listed above.

Giovanni Manu

Selected: Round 5, 46th overall
Position: offensive line
School: UBC
Ht: 6-8; Wt: 340

Notable: Drafted last Saturday by the Detroit Lions in the fourth round... Absolutely freakish size and testing numbers to go with it – he ran an astonishing 5.03 yard 40 at his UBC pro day, which was attended by 16 NFL teams... Originally born in Tonga.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: Well, he might not ever play in Canada, given he's a man mountain and has earned a long look by the Lions – even if they move on from him, the amount of NFL interest shown before the draft means several teams will line up to take their own look. Still, at this stage in the draft, it's certainly worth the risk for the club.

AK Gassama

Selected: Round 6, 55th overall
Position: receiver
School: Manitoba
Ht: 5-9; Wt: 158

Notable: He's an inspiration as his family fled Sierra Leone during the civil war to land in Winnipeg... He had 38 receptions for 465 yards and four TDs last season... Was a U Sports First Team All-Canadian last year and a Second Team All-Canadian in 2022 and was a two-time Canada West All-Star... Named Bison Sports Male Athlete of the Year in 2022 and 2023.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: He and Clercius give the Blue Bombers receiver depth behind veterans Nic Demski and Drew Wolitarsky and second-year man Jeremy Murphy. He's a different body type than Clercius and more of a speed/deep threat target.

Michael Vlahogiannis


Selected: Round 7, 64th overall
Position: offensive line
School: McGill
Ht: 6-3; Wt: 312

Notable: A Quebec conference all-star last year at centre... Started seven games last year and 19 in his career with the Redbirds.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: Canadian O-line depth is critical and now the club has it in abundance in Neufeld, Kolankowski, Liam Dobson, Tui Eli, Wallace, Manu (although he's bound for the NFL) and Vlahogiannis.

Owen Hubert


Selected: Round 8, 73rd overall
Position: defensive end
School: McMaster
Ht: 6-4; Wt: 263

Notable: Good testing numbers at the CFL Combine with a vertical jump of 30 inches and 113 inches in the broad jump, while running a 5.03 40... Saw action in 17 games with the Marauders.

Why he's a good fit for the Blue Bombers: The Blue Bombers are stacked at Canadian at defensive tackle, but Hubert could give them another option at end behind Anthony Bennett, last year's top pick.

GLOBAL DRAFT SELECTIONS

Fabian Weitz

Selected: Round 1, eighth overall
Position: linebacker
School/last club: Cologne Centurions (European League of Football)
Ht: 6-0; Wt: 221

FYI: Played his college ball at the University of Buffalo (2018-22), appearing in 22 games and working primarily on special teams... Returned to his hometown to play with the Cologne Centurions in Germany and had 20 tackles and a fumble recovery in five games in 2023... Ran a 4.77 at the CFL Global Combine, the second-fastest time among a group that was primarily D-linemen and linebackers. Also 17 reps on the bench.

Lucky Ogbevoen

Selected: Round 2, 17th overall
Position: defensive back/linebacker
School/last club: Tirol Raiders (ELF)
Ht: 6-2; Wt: 223

FYI: Born in Vienna, Austria and began playing football in 2012, playing with the Austrian National U17 and U19 teams... Attended the 2022 NFL International Combine in London... He was the Raiders defensive MVP in 2022 after registering 79 total tackles, one and a half sacks, and 10 tackles for loss.

https://forums.bluebombers.com/index.php?action=post;topic=55598.0;last_msg=1620541
"You can't let praise or criticism get to you. It's a weakness to get caught up in either one." - John Wooden

TecnoGenius

I think we did pretty well in terms of getting what we needed.  We may not have gotten the gravy, but we did fill the holes.  Assuming some/many/most work out.

The Can Mafia is pretty good at judging fit and character, not just the stats.  I'll assume many/most of these picks can be Winnipeg Locker Room guys.

I can go to sleep satisfied, and feeling a little better about our overall team structure.
Never go full Rider!

Blue In BC

It appears that 2 of the draft choices will return to school after TC. Manu is a long shot to come to the CFL or he may be here in 3 or 4 years.

So that leaves us with 7 Canadians and 2 global players looking to crack the roster. A few will end up on the PR in 2024. I'd guess that 3 or 4 will make the AR.
Take no prisoners

kkc60

All in all, I like the picks. STs/blocking seemed to be the name of the game early, which is never a bad approach. Love the Samson pick, Schmekel didn't show much last season and being potentially 3 deep at Canadian DT is not a bad thing.

Future long snapper and a talented return man in AK are nice additions late. Would have liked to see more LB/DBs brought in to compete but can never go wrong with OL

Blue In BC

#5
IDK about Gassama. He's so light and I doubt he'll be the leading returner for the team. As a receiver, I'm not sure. We still have Murphy as depth. Our global draft choices were on the defensive side of the ball, so there is that to consider.
Take no prisoners

theaardvark

I thought the draft would go a completely different direction in the order in which positions were taken, but looking at the result, I am again impressed with Walters and company. 

Good value at each spot, filled holes, current and future, took one flyer on what could end up being a huge (literally) Oline presence, got a LS that's going back to school giving us security behind Benson. 

We have lost some ST grit the last few years, but it looks like this draft really addressed that.  Might we have the new Miller in camp this year?
Unabashed positron.  Blue koolaid in my fridge.  I wear my blue sunglasses at night.  Homer, d'oh.

kkc60

Quote from: Blue In BC on May 01, 2024, 02:38:26 PMIDK about Gassama. He's so light and I doubt he'll be the leading returner for the team. As a receiver, I'm not sure. We still have Murphy as depth. Our global draft choices were on the defensive side of the ball, so there is that to consider.
I think without Grant, we can truly audition him as a returner. I doubt he's the best option, but a year on the PS, professional trainers and dieticians to help him out on some weight and I think there is immense potential

LXTSN

Love that we added some players that can be great on special teams.
I don't see Clercius or Chris-Ike as potential starters down the road. I do see them as great special teams fits, and potential back-ups or role players to fill in on some packages.

theaardvark

The top 2 picks make the team for special teams play alone, Clercius replacing Sheed, Chris-Ike replacing Johnson, both cheaper, both Nats and I don't think we will see a dropoff.

Masterful use of the roster, you have to wonder if these two players were the exact picks Walters wanted.  The off season roster moves, and how well these players fit into those holes suggests to me that this was the plan all along, and the trade down move ensured that we got both.

Taking 4 OL through the draft, ranging in size from 6'2 to 6'8, 309 lbs to 344 lbs, with wide ranging skillsets, I think they filled the pipe in a very interesting way. 

The panel was suggesting we could start 9 Nats this year, Wallace played games at OT in Buffalo, could he be in the competition for RT to give us 10 Nat starters?  Longshot for a rookie to start at RT, but 6'6, 344 with a 29.5" vertical...
Unabashed positron.  Blue koolaid in my fridge.  I wear my blue sunglasses at night.  Homer, d'oh.

Pigskin

I have mixed feeling about the draft. Would have like to have picked up Okopko at #8. Then at #13 and 14, Brubacher or Hladik at either one of those picks. Needed a WR, Clercius was a nice pickup. Did we really need another RB at that point in the draft.

I liked what we did at #17 and 20. Lots of competition at DT, Samson 6'3" 290. Wallace could be a good one.

Can't go wrong on taking a flyer on Manu.

Interesting pick at #73. Owen Hubert 6'4" 263. This kid could be a good one. 
Don't go through life looking in the rearview mirror.

Blue In BC

Quote from: kkc60 on May 01, 2024, 03:31:51 PMI think without Grant, we can truly audition him as a returner. I doubt he's the best option, but a year on the PS, professional trainers and dieticians to help him out on some weight and I think there is immense potential

Well I'm still thinking we have a chance to re-sign Grant. He always signs very late. If he doesn't, there are a bunch of receivers and DB's that are also returners. One or more might make the AR as a DI.

Gassama doesn't appear to be a guy that is going to go downfield on coverage teams. I don't see him as ever being the next man up as a receiver.

We'll see but is there a smaller player in the CFL?
Take no prisoners

theaardvark

Quote from: Pigskin on May 01, 2024, 04:02:20 PMI have mixed feeling about the draft. Would have like to have picked up Okopko at #8. Then at #13 and 14, Brubacher or Hladik at either one of those picks. Needed a WR, Clercius was a nice pickup. Did we really need another RB at that point in the draft.

I liked what we did at #17 and 20. Lots of competition at DT, Samson 6'3" 290. Wallace could be a good one.

Can't go wrong on taking a flyer on Manu.

Interesting pick at #73. Owen Hubert 6'4" 263. This kid could be a good one. 

I think that the conventional wisdom is as you suggest.  But the Mafia is far from conventional.  We sucked on teams last year.  So, they went out and got teams demons.  Exactly replacing Sheed/Miller/Johnson's roles with Nats in picks 13-14.  We will have to see how they pan out at this level, but on paper this looks brilliant, IMHO.
Unabashed positron.  Blue koolaid in my fridge.  I wear my blue sunglasses at night.  Homer, d'oh.

Pigskin

Quote from: theaardvark on May 01, 2024, 04:12:02 PMI think that the conventional wisdom is as you suggest.  But the Mafia is far from conventional.  We sucked on teams last year.  So, they went out and got teams demons.  Exactly replacing Sheed/Miller/Johnson's roles with Nats in picks 13-14.  We will have to see how they pan out at this level, but on paper this looks brilliant, IMHO.


What was Johnson's role?
Don't go through life looking in the rearview mirror.

Blue In BC

Take no prisoners