catent
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2013
- Messages
- 4,118
- Reaction score
- 8,751
it may not die, but it will be severely injured. Wolf was the best thing to walk into our draft room in nearly a decade!
how many more horrible flame out second round defensive backs can we afford to draft?
Based on what evidence? Your intuition? Gut feeling? Internal source in NE? Reporting?
And I'd ask the same thing of everyone else here pounding the Wolf drum: What evidence exists that he has brought unique value to the Patriots and that the team's front-office would struggle in his absence?
I mean that completely sincerely. If there is good, legitimate evidence that Wolf has injected new ideas and approaches to the Patriots front-office that otherwise would not exist, then I'll stand right next to you pounding the drum for the team to make every effort to retain him. The thing is, though, I don't think this evidence really exists to a layperson who doesn't work for the Patriots. I think everyone here advocating for Wolf are doing so based on their personal, subjective whims and instincts, which is essentially an opinion with little-to-no evidence. It might be right, but there is no evidence that it's right.
So again, I completely genuinely/sincerely ask the Wolf proponents to present the evidence that he's a uniquely talented general manager and that the team would struggle in his absence. And when I say evidence, I don't mean a single-year correlation with a (likely) better-than-average draft class; I mean legitimate evidence in the form of quotes from Patriots personnel, researched stories, etc, that details the work Wolf does with the team. Or, if you're well-connected to internal Patriots sources, share what those folks tell you.
My totally subjective, gut-feeling is that the Patriots front-office will be more than fine whether or not Eliot Wolf is working for them.












