A couple of thoughts on this topic
1. While I had to listen to more babble on this topic on the radio, this thought occurred to me. As of now EVERYONE is taking Schecter's report as gospel, as if it came directly from Bill or a surrogate with orders from Bill. Then I started to wonder, if this was reality and the Pats wanted to get the word out that they aren't trading JG under any reasonable circumstances, why give the story to Schecter rather than Reiss or Curran, 2 guys who are known to have close and good relations to the organization. Why give Schecter the big scoop? Just a thought.
2. Cleveland has so many draft picks this year, last year and next year they are reaching a point of dimishing returns. You can't keep all your draft picks every year and build a stable roster. You often end up releasing a talent like Gabriel because you have to absorb such a large influx of new talent every year. In the end you wind up training talent that will blossom on their NEXT team.
The point being Cleveland can afford to give the Pats multiple picks this year and next to make a deal for JG.
3. BB was an Economics Major in college. He understands the value of a diminishing asset, and that is what JG is until he actually gets to play. He also has to recognize the fact that NOW he has a VERY favorable market place with a number of teams desperately needing QB's and the current QB class in the draft being particularly weak.
4. We had a 450+ post thread that droned on and on, from pillar to post and in the end concluded that "the Pats won't trade Jimmy Garapolo.....unless of course they do." This thread is a continuation of that thread.
5. I repeat this guarantee, with the exception of Shanahan who has a 6 year deal with the Niners, any HC who picks one of these QB's in the first round, won't be around long enough to see if they ACTUALLY develop into a good NFL starter. So to pick one would seem to be professional suicide, where you only reward you get is the thanks of the guy who replaces you. (IF the kid works out)