Wolf is a gutless, sweater-wearing weenie. "We". How about, "I was a ****ing lost little girl until Vrabel showed up. Now I just giggle a lot in the background."
I do wonder, based on Wolf's comments, if having a head coach who actually articulated a plan for each of the positions they were looking for was part of the reason for the turnaround last spring. It's one thing to evaluate and draft a player based on their talent at a position. It's also another factor to consider the scheme they're going to be running, and making sure that the player is a fit for it.
Wolf sort of indicated that there wasn't quite the same sort of direction with Mayo, which feels like they drafted several square pegs after the coaching staff seemed like they were adjusting on the fly and didn't really have a sense of what they were going to do. If I recall, I think they tried one scheme and then had to change direction.
Vrabel obviously had a plan from the time he got here, and having Josh and a more experienced staff, I'm sure, also helped. However, I do think their vision was clouded on Polk in 2024 due to the relationship with the guys in Washington, rather than his overall skill set relative to other players. Feels like the same situation that we saw in the past with players being drafted based on praise from a coach/coaches the staff had a relationship with. I might be wrong, but I don't remember too many of those working out.
I think they trusted a little too much in those relationships in that decision, and that swing-and-miss is disappointing. But it feels like having more of a plan played a big role last offseason. Hopefully, they can repeat that success this month because they definitely need it. It is interesting that, as we've seen, it feels like Vrabel has no issue moving on from guys, including on his staff, that he doesn't believe are good enough. We saw that this offseason. I'm sure if Wolf isn't pulling his weight, he won't continue.