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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Let me get this straight.
If the player the Patriots picked works out and the player Mel Kiper thought we should have flops, our pick was still a reach, even though the Patriots have better knowledge of what other teams might have picked than a draft analyst does?
Buffalo was being projected to go either WR or CB by almost every mock I'd seen. Not surprisingly, they drafted a CB.
As for Wheatley, being the 'second corner' doesn't mean he was in a run. I means he was the 'second corner'. Perhaps if he'd not been picked, there wouldn't have been a run. Perhaps he wouldn't have been picked during that run, and almost nothing the GM's or coaches will tell us about this in the near future will be trustworthy. You don't know what would have happened.
They were reaches. Such is life.
The Patriots had two fairly high picks coming up in the third round. After Wheatley, they made a trade and still got Crable.
Obviously they wanted Wheatley. Why would they risk not getting the player they wanted by fooling around when they had two more chances to get the player they were supposed to have wanted high in the third?
Says to me they targeted Wheatley.
Is it really so difficult to understand something as simple as the word 'reach' being a word used by analysts to describe players taken higher than the range most of the punditry projected that player to be taken in? Seriously?
Is it really so difficult to understand something as simple as the word 'reach' being a word used by analysts to describe players taken higher than the range most of the punditry projected that player to be taken in? Seriously?
Of course not. If this was the Lions making these picks, you (and the rest of the people who've suddenly gotten religiong about defining a term) would be all over Millen about how bad his drafting was because he was reaching. Why pretend that this is anything but a bunch of homers getting their backs up because their team is being questioned? Are you going to pretend that you've never graded any team's draft or critiqued any team's pick? If you're not going to make that claim, then you have no leg to stand on.
They reached. They took a player they wanted earlier than he was expected to go rather than dropping down and picking up more compensation while still drafting that player at a lower position. If you don't mind that they did that, why do you care that it's called a reach?
"Given the Chargers recent history of draft success, why the hell would BB trade a pick to San Diego that will likely result in less than a 10 slot improvement next season when they could simply have taken the player the Chargers coveted (Hester) instead, and begun preparing for the post-Faulk days?"
You'll agree with me that only dunce organizations (there are some) draft based on the consensus of a bunch posers while the top organizations have completely individualized boards and a knowledge of other teams boards so they don't actually reach for players they covet, even if they seem to based on the guys from ESPN etc.
Well, let's be fair about this.
A.) The press is comprised of a lot of former players, coaches, GMs, scouts, etc... as well as the regular geeks.
B.) The 32 teams aren't about to publish a 'consensus' manual for people to work off of.
C.) One of the great ironies of these threads insisting that the team didn't reach is that this board had plenty of pre-draft threads predicting where people would be picked, which players the team should pick and where, etc... and it's not as if none of those complaining that picks are being called reaches participated in the pre-draft threads and/or conversations with friends, etc...
Kiper grew up in Baltimore, Maryland and resides in Jarrettsville, Maryland with his family. He attended Calvert Hall College High School and Essex Community College. He never participated in football on any level in high school or college.[13] He is also the uncle on his mother's side of Academy Award winning filmmaker Quentin Tarantino.
Kiper grew up in Baltimore, Maryland and resides in Jarrettsville, Maryland with his family. He attended Calvert Hall College High School and Essex Community College. He never participated in football on any level in high school or college.[13] He is also the uncle on his mother's side of Academy Award winning filmmaker Quentin Tarantino.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel_Kiper_Jr.
Boy, I gave you more credit than this.
So we're supposed to build our team based on the chargers draft board?
Hmmm... wasn't one of the evaluators for ESPN a former G.M. for the Titans, for example? Wasn't one working for NFLN a former G.M. of multiple teams, for another example?
Great! 1 guy out of how many? Keep in mind that the millions of dollars from his former owner to ammass hundreds of highly qualified scouts didn't go with him to ESPN.
I'm sure ESPN doesn't spend one tenth of the money that a single team does on scouting.
I still can't get my head around the fact that some people want NFL teams to make picks based on mock drafts.
Charlie Casserly, the former Texans GM, said numerous times during the NFL Network coverage that he hadn't seen tape of certain picks, yet we're supposed to take his grading of a player more seriously than professional scouts and talent evaluators who have watched numerous tapes, held interviews, done background checks etc?
Insane in the extreme.
I'm curious..... who has said that they want NFL teams to make picks based upon mock drafts?
What else are reaches based upon?
How many examples are needed? Do you think the people who do this stuff for the networks don't learn things from guys like Parcells, Gibbs, etc... when they are on their stations? I could, theoretically, come up with a list of thousands and you'd still be arguing because you're not actually arguing the facts. Heck, now you're tossing in financial expenditures. You're just blindly defending the Patriots.
What was your point again?
They probably learn things as well as I do here.
There's a saying, 'every man is a fool in some man's opinion.'
When O'Connell was chosen, the only one on the 5 member ESPN Politburo (I was at a bar with a mix of fans) who was knowingly in favor (as in, knew who he was and agreed with the pick) was Jaws. They went away to commercial and never came back to discuss the pick.
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