I think sometimes the front office out thinks itself by attempting to take WRs who are more intelligent, even if they lack some of the talent that a guy like D.Thomas had. Either that, or they target a specific group of WRs who they hope will work out and that group is much smaller than we may realize. The truth may be a combination of both to try and raise the odds of having them understand the system. Unfortunately, that hasn't paid off very well.
It seemed that this year they may have made some changes to help these kids along, especially under the circumstances. There was no room for failure this season. Either that, or they really hit home runs, but I'm guessing it was a bit more of the former.
To build on some of the other posts here, I think we can all agree that the best way to get a gamebreaking receiver without breaking your cap in the process is through the draft. But guess what? Drafting receivers is
really hard. This isn't unique to Belichick. The Packers are probably the only team that can consistently nail it, and who even knows how much of that is just the Rodgers effect.
The following guys were first round picks between 2003 and 2012:
Charles Rogers (2)
Bryant Johnson (17)
Larry Fitzgerald (3)
Roy Williams (7)
Reggie Williams (9)
Lee Evans (13)
Michael Clayton (15)
Michael Jenkins (29)
Rashaun Woods (31)
Braylon Edwards (3)
Troy Williamson (7)
Mike Williams (10)
Matt Jones (21)
Mark Clayton (22)
Roddy White (27)
Santonio Holmes (25)
Calvin Johnson (2)
Ted Ginn (9)
Dwayne Bowe (23)
Robert Meacham (27)
Craig Davis (30)
Anthony Gonzalez (32)
Darrius Heyward-Bey (7)
Michael Crabtree (10)
Jeremy Maclin (19)
Percy Harvin (22)
Hakeem Nicks (29)
Kenny Britt (30)
Demaryius Thomas (22)
Dez Bryant (24)
AJ Green (4)
Julio Jones (6)
Jonathan Baldwin (26)
Justin Blackmon (5)
Michael Floyd (13)
Kendall Wright (20)
AJ Jenkins (30)
Of that group, I'd say it's too early to make a call on three guys -- Blackmon, Floyd, and Wright. Of the remaining 34 players, I'd say that Fitzgerald, White, Holmes, CJ, Nicks, Thomas, Bryant, Green, and Jones have been definite good picks. That's 9.
Of the 25 that are still left, I'd say that Braylon, Crabtree, Maclin, Bowe, Harvin, and maybe even Britt have become genuine assets, even if they were drafted too high in hindsight. That's another 6.
Which means 19 of the 34 have just been general failures as draft picks. That's over half, although it does seem that there was just a ton of misses from 2003-2005 (only 2 of 15 really earned their draft spots), and that since then the percentages have been a fair amount better. But still, to have that high of a percentage whiffing, compounded with the fact that even when you hit it doesn't necessary correlate all that strongly with winning, and it is a lot of risk without a ton of comparative reward. At least QBs justify being high-risk picks by rewarding the hell out of you if they hit.
So I think we can all agree that, over the last decade, picking a WR in the first round has been a 50/50 proposition at best for getting a real asset. Now let's look at the second round over the same time frame.
Taylor Jacobs (44)
Bethel Johnson (45)
Anquan Boldin (54)
Tyrone Calico (60)
Devery Henderson (50)
Darius Watts (54)
Keary Colbert (62)
Reggie Brown (35)
Mark Bradley (39)
Roscoe Parrish (55)
Terence Murphy (58)
Vincent Jackson (61)
Chad Jackson (36)
Sinorice Moss (44)
Greg Jennings (52)
Sidney Rice (44)
Dwayne Jarrett (45)
Steve Smith (51)
Donnie Avery (33)
Devin Thomas (34)
Jordy Nelson (36)
James Hardy (41)
Eddie Royal (42)
Jerome Simpson (46)
DeSean Jackson (49)
Malcolm Kelly (51)
Limas Sweed (53)
Dexter Jackson (58)
Brian Robiskie (36)
Mohamed Massaquoi (50)
Arrelious Benn (39)
Golden Tate (60)
Titus Young (44)
Torrey Smith (58)
Greg Little (59)
Randall Cobb (64)
Brian Quick (33)
Stephen Hill (43)
Alshon Jeffery (45)
Ryan Broyles (54)
Rueben Randle (63)
That's 41 guys, and of them I think you can only definitively call the following hits: Boldin, VJax, Jennings, Avery, Nelson, DeSean, Rice, Tate, Torrey Smith, Cobb, and Jeffery. That already feels pretty generous, but if I'm being exceptionally generous I'll call Randle and Broyles close enough to a hit given how short their careers have been, then call Simpson, Henderson, Royal, and Steve Smith hits because they are (or were) better-than-league-average receivers.
Even the most generous of all interpretations only gets me to 17 out of 41, or ~40% hit rate.
So, long story short, drafting WRs in the first 2 rounds is really hard, and only one team does it particularly well. If the Pats end up hitting on Dobson, then having Branch and Dobson to show for 4 second round WR picks. That's actually better than the league average over roughly the same time frame. If you're getting a good WR for one out of every 2 picks, you're doing better than the league average.
Now look at third rounders:
Kelley Washington (65)
Nate Burleson (71)
Kevin Curtis (74)
Billy McMullen (95)
Derrick Hamilton (77)
Bernard Berrian (78)
Devard Darling (82)
Courtney Roby (68)
Chris Henry (83)
Brandon Jones (96)
Travis Wilson (78)
Derek Hagan (82)
Brandon Williams (84)
Maurice Stovall (90)
Willie Reid (95)
Jacoby Jones (73)
Yamon Figurs (74)
Laurent Robinson (75)
Jason Hill (76)
James Jones (77)
Mike Sims-Walker (78)
Paul Williams (80, and yes, that was a run 7 WRs in 8 picks)
Johnnie Lee Higgins (99)
Earl Bennett (70)
Early Doucet (81)
Harry Douglas (84)
Mario Manningham (94)
Andre Caldwell (97)
Derrick Williams (82)
Brandon Tate (83)
Mike Wallace (84)
Ramses Barden (85)
Patrick Turner (87)
Deon Butler (91)
Juaquin Iglesias (99)
Damian Williams (77)
Brandon LaFell (78)
Emmanuel Sanders (82)
Jordan Shipley (84)
Eric Decker (87)
Andre Roberts (88)
Armanti Edwards (89)
Taylor Price (90)
Austin Pettis (78)
Leonard Hankerson (79)
Vincent Brown (82)
Jerrel Jernigan (83)
DeVier Posey (68)
TJ Graham (69)
Mohamed Sanu (83)
TY Hilton (92)
Just look at that list. 51 players selected, and Mike Wallace is the only one that's ever played in a Pro Bowl. If I'm willing to stretch the definition of "good" to its breaking point, I can maybe come up with 17 guys on that list who aren't bad. But those are the odds that you're up against if you want to draft a WR.
Anyways, in short, I really wish fans would stop going nuts about the Pats' inability to draft WRs in rounds 2-3. Unless you're the Packers, shotgun approach with these guys is pretty much the only way to do it.