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Its not really mind boggling, richards is a typical BB second rnd DB pick. Hes another in a long line of similar picks.jordan richards was a 2nd round pick.
mind boggling.
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Its not really mind boggling, richards is a typical BB second rnd DB pick. Hes another in a long line of similar picks.jordan richards was a 2nd round pick.
mind boggling.
BB second round record is more misses than hits:
Richards
Dibson
Wilson
Ras-IR
Cunningham
Brace
Butler
But his hits have been spectacular :
Gronk
Vollmer
Vereen
Has Halapio done anything? Maybe they thought he would be better the 2nd time around
where is the stork failed his physical thread and is back on the patriot roster?
I started the thread to discuss potential roster cuts down to 53 and there were about three posts on topic. It was a boring idea.
The Patriots released Stork Monday evening after he was returned to the team after failing his physical with the Redskins.
The team also placed injured offensive lineman Tre’ Jackson on the physically unable to perform list, meaning he will sit out at least the first six weeks.
Watching BB build the roster each year is like watching this:
Well, considering that the Patriots immediately released him, what would the point of that thread be?where is the stork failed his physical thread and is back on the patriot roster?
1) Vinnie Sunseri
2) Kevin Snyder
3) Jon Halapio or Keveon
4) Woodrow Hamilton
5) Why not Lewis? I didn't know you could reserve PUP this early.
Belichick is 50/50 on the 2nd round..
This doesn’t have to be a knock on the NFL’s talent evaluators. The author Michael Mauboussin has written about what he calls the “Paradox of Skill,” a counterintuitive theory that states that as the aggregate skill level of a market’s participants increases, the proportion of outcomes attributable to luck also increases. Put another way, the smaller the variation in skill between competitors, the more opportunity for randomness to be a differentiating factor. By this reading, NFL general managers are the victims of their own obsessive pre-draft preparations — their skill level has increased so much that only the effects of chance remain.