lancerman
Pro Bowl Player
- Joined
- May 28, 2017
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Even if we take your methodology and double it. What effectively happenis we get another Branch and Edelman and 3 years of Harry and 1 year of Mitchell.Uh, Hines Ward was drafted before all this. What's next, should I credit Irving Fryar and Terry Glenn to the Patriots?
You're missing what I said. I never wrote that the Patriots are just as good at drafting WRs. My whole point is that the Patriots do not expend enough draft resources in picking them.
This should be evident if you didn't misread my initial post.
The Steelers simply throw a lot more draft picks at the problem of finding a WR, and if you don't believe this explains their success, then explain why they didn't draft their top WRs like Sanders, Wallace, or even Antonio Brown, a 7th rounder, sooner. It's not like they really knew these guys were Pro Bowl level WRs. They just throw picks at the problem. It's like the Tom Brady draft. The Patriots had no idea what they were getting or they would have drafted Brady much sooner. Heck, they didn't even need Brady, as they had just drafted Michael Bishop the year before AND they had a Pro Bowl QB already playing for them. But they drafted Brady anyway. In the 6th round. The Steelers take the same mentality with WRs, and if they find a Antonio Brown there, then great.
That is not superior to the Steelers. That is still zero pro bowls. That is 2 1000 yard seasons.
There is no sane person that would argue even doubling that would be better than what the Steelers have done drafting WR in the current reality.
The Steelers hit more (and yeah I’m not giving you the massive stretches of Givens and Mitchell) and when they hit, they get much higher quality.
We have drafted two guys that had successful careers in the league. Between both they have one 1000 yard season between them and zero pro bowls. One proved he couldn’t succeed outside NE. The other is someone who likely wouldn’t











