The article is CRAP because there is no context. What have other teams done in the same period? And with WHAT picks? There are NOT a lot of "special" DBs out there, and it seems to be one of the great crap shoots in drafting. Plenty of guys look like they have the physical skills, but don't have the NFL head for it. Plenty of guys looks like they have the physical skills, but in a tough physical position - cutting, twisting, turning, tumbling in a heap - get hurt a lot, and one injury to a knee or a hip can change everything at this position. Like Dowling.
A quick rebuttal:
Antwan Harris (4th round, 2000): Started two games in three years, out of the league by 2004.
Leonard Myers (6th round, 2001): Started one game in two years, out of the league by 2004.
The Pats secondary in 2004-2005 was pretty good, so I wouldn't expect much out of a 4th and a 6th in that era, unless the guy was a diamond in the rough. It's unlikely anyone drafted here would still be with the team anyway, so it's irrelevant to the premise of the article.
Eugene Wilson (2nd round, 2003): Started 55 games in five years with New England.
Asante Samuel (4th round, 2003): Perenniel Pro Bowler, played five season in New England before being traded.
A couple of pretty good picks, I'd say!
Guss Scott (3rd round, 2004): Cut after one season.
Dexter Reid (4th round, 2004): Cut after one season.
And a couple of misses.
Ellis Hobbs (3rd round, 2005): Started for four years in New England.
James Sanders (4th round, 2005): Started for two season, back-up for four others in New England.
Two more pretty good picks. You get 4 years out of a 3rd rounder and 6 years out of a 4th, and you did pretty well!
Willie Andrews (7th round, 2006): Never started, let go after two years.
Umm, yeah, like most 7th rounders...
Brandon Meriweather (1st round, 2007): In and out of the starting lineup for four years before leaving for Tampa Bay.
This one hurt, I admit. BM could have been a good player. Flashed, but serious head case in the end. No discipline back there won't cut it on a BB team.
Mike Richardson (6th round, 2007): Cut after one season.
6th round...typical for every team.
Terrence Wheatley (2nd round, 2008): Cut after two seasons.
Jonathan Wilhite (4th round, 2008): Started 13 games in three years before leaving.
Patrick Chung (2nd round, 2009): In and out of the starting lineup for four years before leaving.
Darius Butler (2nd round, 2009): Cut after two years.
This is the heart of the problem, particularly 2008 (the rest of the list goes against the thesis of the article, in my opinion). How good would Wheatley have been sans injury? And Butler is actually pretty good now.
Devin McCourty (1st round, 2010): Has started for three years.
Great pick.
Ras-I Dowling (2nd round, 2011): Cut before this season .
Discussed to death already. Would have been great to see him stay healthy, but such is life.
Malcolm Williams (7th round, 2011): Appeared in four games in two years, zero starts. No longer on team.
Irrelevant - 7th round.
Tavon Wilson (2nd round, 2012): Started five games last year.
Remains to be seen, the hatred here notwithstanding. His numbers were not bad last year - were pretty good, actually. He needs to take a step up, but no one here or elsewhere knows if he will or won't, and a big part of that is whether or not the Pats find a role for him that fits his skills - see McCourty, Devin.
Nate Ebner (6th round, 2012): Back-up last year, zero starts.
Yeah, umm, he's a special teamer and was drafted as a project.
Alfonzo Dennard (7th round, 2012):
GREAT pick.
So I fail to see how this analysis lives up to the title of the article. Nor does it make any comparisons of any relevance to bolster the point.
What likelihood do 2nd, 4th, 6th round cbs and safeties have of impacting a team positively? Guys like Pat Peterson (5th), Darelle Revis (14th) and Sherman (25th) are gone by the time the first Pats' pick comes up.
I'll also add that talking about secondary play is among the hardest things to do for a fan. So much depends on scheme, assignment, and things like PASS RUSH. JAG DBs look a lot stronger when teams have a pass rush like the Giants have had, for example.
The Pats haven't had that in years. It's not the defense they have schemed. BB even admitted as much, saying that sacks were overrated. They've played a bend-don't-break, and usually because they're playing from way ahead. In so many games, the Patriots let QBs connect for 5-15 over the middle because the clock is more important than the yards gained.
The Packers adopted a similar philosophy, to similar results. Same for the Saints.
I think that era is over, and BB knows it. I expect a much more aggressive charge for the QB this year. That alone will make their d backfield much better.