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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.This makes no sense.I believe that means he wanted Belichick to listen more during the process, but he still had final say, just as Wolf has final say now. At no point did anyone have the ability to override Belichick’s decision. And yes, it does mean Belichick always maintained the ability to have the final say, and no one has ever shown any proof that any of his subordinates could override his decisions.
I imagine Bill thought that as well.I recently started updating a ss that I have of all the AFCE drafts since 2000. One of the biggest things I noticed was how many more picks the Pats have had compared to the other three teams. Not counting any mistakes that I made these are the total picks for each team the last 25 years;
NE - 224
Buf - 199
Mia - 179
NJ - 171
Apparently the Pats and Jets/Miami are on opposite sides of the draft. Those two teams seem to favor trading picks for players but it doesn't seem to work as well as having more picks. If the draft is a crap shoot then more picks is likely better and is a tactic I support.
While updating the ss I noticed that quite a few draft picks for all four teams don't show up on Pro-football Reference. When I looked into them I noticed that they were all mostly late picks who were traded and ended up on the PS for teams and never played a game.
This makes no sense.
Belichick was always listening. He doesn't scout the college game himself. It would be impossible for any head coach to do so.
It meant that Belichick would have to abide by the recommendations sometimes.
Callahan said as much on the decision to go with Smith-Schuster instead of Jakobi Meyers.
There were also articles about Belichick wanting to move on from Mac Jones.
Team Bill gaslighting notwithstanding- BB was the defacto GM until his exit. Both good and bad personnel decisions were 100% his responsibility. Nobody else’s. Fact.
There's a logical inconsistency in what you're writing here. Again, Belichick isn't doing the college scouting. What does it mean that he's "listening" to them more? He HAS to always listen to them because they are the scouts. Then he does what he thinks is best. That's how it always was. So then what changed?Kraft wanted Belichick to listen to his scouts and personal people more, because he was notorious for blowing them off and going his own way, but that in no way means any of them ever had the authority to override him. And still to this point not one person has ever been able to provide proof that anyone did override him, or had the authority to do so. In fact many of his subordinates left so they could get the authority to make the final decisions, and did just that at other franchises.
And still to this point not one person has ever been able to provide proof that anyone did override him, or had the authority to do so.
Given the hit or miss nature of the process, I agree that the drafts have been better than the perception. The draft results feel worse than they are because success on the field has not been there and the fact that he most impactful player drafted torpedoed multiple seasons when things didn't work out. Rainmaker highlighted why the team has not gotten better when he said that there were no impact players selected. Before selecting Gonzalez the team went many years without drafting someone who stood out as a top NFL talent. The bottom line is that championship level teams need a core of players who are top 5 at their positions. The team currently has 1, 2 if you count punters.3 starters in each draft. That's what you want and need. Teams don't do better than that.
If you look back on those drafts, the Patriots fulfilled that in 3 of the 4.
Onwenu, Anfernee, Dugger, Rham, Barmore, Marcus Jones, Strange, Jack Jones a starter but a headcase, Douglas, Sow, Keion White, Gonzalez.
This is not a failure. 13 starters in 4 drafts is par for the course.
There's a logical inconsistency in what you're writing here. Again, Belichick isn't doing the college scouting. What does it mean that he's "listening" to them more? He HAS to always listen to them because they are the scouts. Then he does what he thinks is best. That's how it always was. So then what changed?
BB over rode the scouts very rarely. He didn't even know who Keion White was in the draft room, our 2nd round pick. If BB does not even know who White is or is not picking Barmore who are 2nd round picks, how many draft picks did BB exert his possible veto power over?“ then he does what he thinks is best.”
This is my point, Belichick always had the final say. And when his subordinates made a good deal, as Wolf did with the Barmore trade., or an assistant or scout found a good player, as Rehbein did with Brady,,Belichick listened and sometimes gave them credit for it.
When a team wins, players that you say "are not top talents" suddenly get All-Pro and Pro Bowl honors. There are more than one of these on the team. Losing teams don't get players with recognition. No matter how good you are. This is the plight of losing teams. Just one example: Barmore. But there are others.Given the hit or miss nature of the process, I agree that the drafts have been better than the perception. The draft results feel worse than they are because success on the field has not been there and the fact that he most impactful player drafted torpedoed multiple seasons when things didn't work out. Rainmaker highlighted why the team has not gotten better when he said that there were no impact players selected. Before selecting Gonzalez the team went many years without drafting someone who stood out as a top NFL talent. The bottom line is that championship level teams need a core of players who are top 5 at their positions. The team currently has 1, 2 if you count punters.
I think you missed my point. At a certain point, Kraft demanded changes. What were the changes?“ then he does what he thinks is best.”
This is my point, Belichick always had the final say. And when his subordinates made a good deal, as Wolf did with the Barmore trade., or an assistant or scout found a good player, as Rehbein did with Brady,,Belichick listened and sometimes gave them credit for it.
It is a bit of a chicken or egg proposition. Teams don't win without good players, winning brings recognition to those players. Barmore has the problem of being one of the few good players on a team that has been bad for a few years. No prime time games means only NE sees his play. As you say he will get more recognition when he is surrounded by enough good players for the team to win more games.When a team wins, players that you say "are not top talents" suddenly get All-Pro and Pro Bowl honors. There are more than one of these on the team. Losing teams don't get players with recognition. No matter how good you are. This is the plight of losing teams. Just one example: Barmore. But there are others.
There's a logical inconsistency in what you're writing here. Again, Belichick isn't doing the college scouting. What does it mean that he's "listening" to them more? He HAS to always listen to them because they are the scouts. Then he does what he thinks is best. That's how it always was. So then what changed?
I think you missed my point. At a certain point, Kraft demanded changes. What were the changes?
Bill chose decent players. They just all happened to be defense in a year everyone knew the Patriots offense needed serious help. Then he trotted out the worst offense in the league.If Bill was judged based on the 2023 Draft, he would have been extended, not fired. There are many reasons to fire Bill, the 2023 Draft was NOT one of them.
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Wolf has 2-3 years to give the team the personnel it needs to be playoff contenders.
Think about what you just wrote. I’m every organization everywhere somebody has “final say”. And by definition subordinates cannot “ override” their superior who has final decision making responsibility.I believe that means he wanted Belichick to listen more during the process, but he still had final say, just as Wolf has final say now. At no point did anyone have the ability to override Belichick’s decision. And yes, it does mean Belichick always maintained the ability to have the final say, and no one has ever shown any proof that any of his subordinates could override his decisions.
Again, no one anywhere has power to override the person responsible for decisions.The change was that Belichick start to listen, instead of just blowing them off. And once again there is no evidence anywhere that anyone had the power to override his decisions.
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