- Joined
- Oct 17, 2007
- Messages
- 2,571
- Reaction score
- 5,858
I did some deep analytical on the 2024 NFL teams. I analyzed where all the current starters or major contributors on offense and defense came from. I compared that to the 2024 won loss record to try to analyze what factors are most important in assembling a winning team.
This is solely where player came from, if they were drafted by you and started in 2024 then it counts as a successful draft pick. If they were drafted by you and left in free agency they count as a starter acquired in free agency by the other team but a miss for you because they are not starting for you. This goes back to 2016 NFL draft. I analyzed first round trades from 2015 to 2023 as 2024 is too early to determine winner.
I'll summarize the data and then list the data in multiple screen shots at the end.
What the data tells me
-Overall draft hit rate is the most correlated data point with success in winning (you had to go to team #12 in those rankings to find the first bottom 10 team in winning % in 2024
-Starters from the draft % had similar success (team 13 was the first bottom 10 team)
-Rounds 1-2 were especially correlated with success. 5 of the top 6 in this data point were within the top 10 of teams in the NFL in 2024 in terms of winning %
-Round 1 hit rate alone: only Browns and Jets represented the only 2 with bad records in the top 14.
-Round 3 has an above average correlation w/ winning but well below round 1 and 2 success.
-Round 4-7 success is not statistically correlated with winning. The worst 16 in this data point had 9 teams with winning records, the best 16 had 8 teams with winning records.
-Having more total picks had no correlation with winning nor did having more 1st and 2nd round picks.
-Eliminating trades with future 1’s and 2’s included (mostly QB’s), trading up was the better strategy 72% of the time in hindsight. Trading down is likely to be a bad move 3 out of 4 times.
-96% of first team All Pro Players were drafted in rounds 1-3, 87% if you include 1st and 2nd team all pro combined. 61% and 55% respectively were drafted in round 1.
-If you fail in the draft you can have a playoff team by using free agency well or making trades to make up for it. You are making things difficult but there is a chance to still field a winning team.
-Your best odds of success are to hit in the first 3 rounds at an above average rate. If not, you need to make it up being well above average in rounds 4-7 and/or nailing free agency.
-There is a chart that shows # of starters by position from rounds 4-7. Don't draft DL and do draft LB, for example.
-Shockingly, if you draft well you are likely to have a winning team.
Success rate by round:
First: 54.5%
Second: 37.3%
Third: 24.3%
Fourth: 13.7%
Fifth: 9.1%
Sixth: 6.3%
Seventh: 3.9%
How An Average NFL team is built
-5 first round picks
-3-4 second round picks
-2-3 third round picks
-1 fourth round pic
-1 fifth round picks
-0-1 sixth round picks
-0 seventh round picks
-6-7 Free Agents
-1-2 UDFA/Waiver Pickups
-2 trades
PATRIOTS ANALYSIS
-Overall, the Patriots are slightly below average drafters, however with 2 moves, that BB was solely responsible for, being changed they become slightly above average
-BB let Thuney go and chose Harry over the scouts preferred receivers Brown/Deebo.
-Patriots rank 16th in hit % of draft picks but only 28th in rounds 1 and 2. They would be 11th and 17th (just ahead of Chiefs) with signing Thuney and drafting Deebo/Brown. The difference having had 2 perennial pro bowl players would be huge.
-Patriots are 4th best in NFL in the rounds 4-7. They have been excellent, relative to other teams, in that part of the draft. Of course, there is an average 8.4% hit rate in rounds 4-7. An average team gets 1-2 starters from there every 3 years.
-They are below average in free agency success.
-The combination of failure in rounds 1 and 2 (Thuney/Harry) and the free agency being below average is the main reason for the poor roster/record
Other Teams
-Washington and Minnesota are outliers. Absolutely terrible drafts but a large number of free agents that start. Adam Peters should have been the run away exec of the year. Kevin O Connel was the coach of the year and was deserved. These 2 teams prove you can make the playoffs but be bad drafters. The Commanders were good at nothing, Vikings at least hit on a good number of first round picks,
-Bucs and Colts are the top 2 drafting teams. The Colts' entire starting offense was drafted by them.
-Browns are the best team drafting rounds 1-2 but near the bottom in rounds 4-7
-Colts and Browns look like 2 teams that suffer greatly from the lack of QB
-Eagles are second to Browns in rounds 1-2 but only 18th in rounds 4-7 and 2nd to Jets in acquiring starters by trade. Hit on rounds 1-2 and make some smart trades was huge part of the formula.
-Chiefs are average drafters, above average in free agency Aquisition.
-Titans (Vrabel's old team) were poor drafters.
What Should Patriots Strategy be to build a team
-DO NOT trade down for more picks, the odds of any pick after the first round of becoming a contributing starter is small. A 2nd round pick fails 2 out of 3 times. A trade down in the same draft fails 3 out of 4 times. Trade down and get a future first or second but that's it.
-Do Trade up. The 2nd and the first 3rd by the draft value chart gets you to 23 in the first. All Day, every day.
-If you want D Line you must draft in rounds 1-3, the higher the better.
-Rounds 4-7 are a complete crap shoot with incredibly low odds of success, sticking with TE/RB/LB in rounds 4-5, WR/Guard in round 6. Always try to trade a 4-7 in current year for a round earlier the following year. Take a flyer on a QB every year down there, most important position and whomever you draft is likely a bust anyways might as well take a flier on a QB.
-YOU CANNOT miss on the first-round pick. Increase your odds on the second pick by trying to move up. I would always try to take the 2nd and 3rd and move up. 75% of 3rd round picks bust.
-The average team gets 2 long term starters out of the draft in a year. The NFL scooting is very good, almost all the ALL Pros are first rounders, success rate by round shows all the teams are pretty decent at analyzing the talent. Accept that you don't have some secret recipe (other than analytics) and try to get picks higher in the draft by moving up.
-You need 5-6 starters from free agency. Your resources put into free agency needs to be just as much as you put into the draft
-Put most of your draft resources and evaluation in the top 100 players, You should spend WAY more time on those prospects over any expected to go later.
-Only 8 of 32 teams have a starter from the 7th round drafted from 2016-2024
-If you are at the top of the draft, take the best player regardless of need. Draft your DL in the first 2 rounds.
Summary
There is a ton of data here, I thought there might be some big reveal that was the secret sauce to contending. Its more nuanced than that. I'm not posting all the data but if any questions let me know.
This is solely where player came from, if they were drafted by you and started in 2024 then it counts as a successful draft pick. If they were drafted by you and left in free agency they count as a starter acquired in free agency by the other team but a miss for you because they are not starting for you. This goes back to 2016 NFL draft. I analyzed first round trades from 2015 to 2023 as 2024 is too early to determine winner.
I'll summarize the data and then list the data in multiple screen shots at the end.
What the data tells me
-Overall draft hit rate is the most correlated data point with success in winning (you had to go to team #12 in those rankings to find the first bottom 10 team in winning % in 2024
-Starters from the draft % had similar success (team 13 was the first bottom 10 team)
-Rounds 1-2 were especially correlated with success. 5 of the top 6 in this data point were within the top 10 of teams in the NFL in 2024 in terms of winning %
-Round 1 hit rate alone: only Browns and Jets represented the only 2 with bad records in the top 14.
-Round 3 has an above average correlation w/ winning but well below round 1 and 2 success.
-Round 4-7 success is not statistically correlated with winning. The worst 16 in this data point had 9 teams with winning records, the best 16 had 8 teams with winning records.
-Having more total picks had no correlation with winning nor did having more 1st and 2nd round picks.
-Eliminating trades with future 1’s and 2’s included (mostly QB’s), trading up was the better strategy 72% of the time in hindsight. Trading down is likely to be a bad move 3 out of 4 times.
-96% of first team All Pro Players were drafted in rounds 1-3, 87% if you include 1st and 2nd team all pro combined. 61% and 55% respectively were drafted in round 1.
-If you fail in the draft you can have a playoff team by using free agency well or making trades to make up for it. You are making things difficult but there is a chance to still field a winning team.
-Your best odds of success are to hit in the first 3 rounds at an above average rate. If not, you need to make it up being well above average in rounds 4-7 and/or nailing free agency.
-There is a chart that shows # of starters by position from rounds 4-7. Don't draft DL and do draft LB, for example.
-Shockingly, if you draft well you are likely to have a winning team.
Success rate by round:
First: 54.5%
Second: 37.3%
Third: 24.3%
Fourth: 13.7%
Fifth: 9.1%
Sixth: 6.3%
Seventh: 3.9%
How An Average NFL team is built
-5 first round picks
-3-4 second round picks
-2-3 third round picks
-1 fourth round pic
-1 fifth round picks
-0-1 sixth round picks
-0 seventh round picks
-6-7 Free Agents
-1-2 UDFA/Waiver Pickups
-2 trades
PATRIOTS ANALYSIS
-Overall, the Patriots are slightly below average drafters, however with 2 moves, that BB was solely responsible for, being changed they become slightly above average
-BB let Thuney go and chose Harry over the scouts preferred receivers Brown/Deebo.
-Patriots rank 16th in hit % of draft picks but only 28th in rounds 1 and 2. They would be 11th and 17th (just ahead of Chiefs) with signing Thuney and drafting Deebo/Brown. The difference having had 2 perennial pro bowl players would be huge.
-Patriots are 4th best in NFL in the rounds 4-7. They have been excellent, relative to other teams, in that part of the draft. Of course, there is an average 8.4% hit rate in rounds 4-7. An average team gets 1-2 starters from there every 3 years.
-They are below average in free agency success.
-The combination of failure in rounds 1 and 2 (Thuney/Harry) and the free agency being below average is the main reason for the poor roster/record
Other Teams
-Washington and Minnesota are outliers. Absolutely terrible drafts but a large number of free agents that start. Adam Peters should have been the run away exec of the year. Kevin O Connel was the coach of the year and was deserved. These 2 teams prove you can make the playoffs but be bad drafters. The Commanders were good at nothing, Vikings at least hit on a good number of first round picks,
-Bucs and Colts are the top 2 drafting teams. The Colts' entire starting offense was drafted by them.
-Browns are the best team drafting rounds 1-2 but near the bottom in rounds 4-7
-Colts and Browns look like 2 teams that suffer greatly from the lack of QB
-Eagles are second to Browns in rounds 1-2 but only 18th in rounds 4-7 and 2nd to Jets in acquiring starters by trade. Hit on rounds 1-2 and make some smart trades was huge part of the formula.
-Chiefs are average drafters, above average in free agency Aquisition.
-Titans (Vrabel's old team) were poor drafters.
What Should Patriots Strategy be to build a team
-DO NOT trade down for more picks, the odds of any pick after the first round of becoming a contributing starter is small. A 2nd round pick fails 2 out of 3 times. A trade down in the same draft fails 3 out of 4 times. Trade down and get a future first or second but that's it.
-Do Trade up. The 2nd and the first 3rd by the draft value chart gets you to 23 in the first. All Day, every day.
-If you want D Line you must draft in rounds 1-3, the higher the better.
-Rounds 4-7 are a complete crap shoot with incredibly low odds of success, sticking with TE/RB/LB in rounds 4-5, WR/Guard in round 6. Always try to trade a 4-7 in current year for a round earlier the following year. Take a flyer on a QB every year down there, most important position and whomever you draft is likely a bust anyways might as well take a flier on a QB.
-YOU CANNOT miss on the first-round pick. Increase your odds on the second pick by trying to move up. I would always try to take the 2nd and 3rd and move up. 75% of 3rd round picks bust.
-The average team gets 2 long term starters out of the draft in a year. The NFL scooting is very good, almost all the ALL Pros are first rounders, success rate by round shows all the teams are pretty decent at analyzing the talent. Accept that you don't have some secret recipe (other than analytics) and try to get picks higher in the draft by moving up.
-You need 5-6 starters from free agency. Your resources put into free agency needs to be just as much as you put into the draft
-Put most of your draft resources and evaluation in the top 100 players, You should spend WAY more time on those prospects over any expected to go later.
-Only 8 of 32 teams have a starter from the 7th round drafted from 2016-2024
-If you are at the top of the draft, take the best player regardless of need. Draft your DL in the first 2 rounds.
Summary
There is a ton of data here, I thought there might be some big reveal that was the secret sauce to contending. Its more nuanced than that. I'm not posting all the data but if any questions let me know.
Last edited:












