Carradine ran a 4.75 soon after recovering from his injury, but with the string of injuries, he probably lost some juice. Haven't given him a good look in some time. But, NE often rolls with 4.85+ DE's (C. Jones and T. Flowers), so it will be interesting to see how much Flores cares. The big difference (athletically) is that both Flowers and Jones had other high-end traits - agility for Jones and burst for Flowers. I think Leadbetter is too limited, but Woodard and Carradine should be functional in this scheme - probably rotational pieces in a perfect world but still solid fits. Harris has the size of NE's OLB's, but he's much slower than guys like J. Collins and K. Van Noy. In terms of profile, Van Ginkel is the most similar to what NE likes to put outside.
Said it before the draft, but I don't care about the talent of the Front 7 in 2019 - probably not in 2020 either. You can build a quality F7 pretty quickly, and I'd plan to spend all my premium resources on offense until I have the pieces to develop into a Top-10/Top-5 unit. I'd only deviate from that for special players. In 2019, Q. Williams and E. Oliver would have been the two players that would have been worth it. Like Wilkins a lot, but unless Miami hits Offense hard and effectively in 2020, you might have a year or two left on his rookie deal by the time Miami's Offense is good enough for the difference between Wilkins and a replacement-level player to matter. Even if you build an elite D, it won't stay elite for long. You might get one year where you're in contention, but you'll still be a longshot to beat a team with a great QB and Offense, and then you'll quickly fall back to earth - like Jacksonville and probably Chicago.
QB success is sustainable and more impactful. Even if you don't have the QB on your roster, your instincts should be like those of a future mother. You should prepare an environment for the future QB to thrive - OL and receiving options. I know that many view WR as one of Miami's strengths, which is probably true, but it's still a below-average group. If Miami went OL/OL in 2019, they'd be in a much better position to draft a WR in the Top 40 in 2020. If I was Miami, I would have gone Lindstrom (13) and McCoy (48) in 2019 with Tua (1) and T. Wallace/J. Reagor (33) as my targets in 2020. Instead, Miami is in the position to hope that they can piece together a good OL like NE. If they do draft a QB early (preferably Tua), they may feel pressure to abandon that strategy and draft OL with one or both of their 2nd's. To be clear and fair, the trade down that netted the 2020 2nd and the trade for Rosen were worthwhile moves, but given my goals for 2020 and how highly I ranked McCoy, I would have just drafted him and slept well, knowing I have high floors and All-Pro potential at C and RG.