Damnit...came to this discussion WAAAAY too late. But I wanted to point out one thing that bothered me to no end:
Even if a second team happens to like the player (See Mankins, Logan), it's still a reach. The notion that 2 teams are willing to reach instead of one doesn't change the general consensus.
You are absolutely 100% incorrect on this. The 'general consensus' is all well and good; there are some pretty smart people who spend a good amount of time and get paid alot of money to analyze the draft and the relative value of players. However, that's analysis in a vacuum--which is to say that these analysts are looking more at a player's abilities and less at team needs and philosophies. Take it out of that vacuum: on draft day, there are
smarter people who spend
their life and get paid even more money to analyze the relative value of players
to their team. So to you, Mankins was a reach because a few 'analysts' said he should have gone later. But in
reality, it turns out that another team would have taken him with the next pick--meaning the Pats would have lost out on a player they coveted.
My second point is along the same lines: at what point does a pick goes from a reach to a good pick? How, exactly, is this determined? Because the Pats would have certainly lost Mayo if they waited another 5 picks for him, and
may have lost him if they waited just one more pick. Is that really a reach?
Finally, I wanted to point out a general principal of economics: the
value of anything, in an open market, is what the highest bidder is willing to spend on that particular item. In the context of the NFL draft, that means that the value of any one player is the draft slot a team is willing to use on that player (and, thus, the amount of money associated with that slot, as well as the opportunity cost of not using that pick on someone else or trading it for some other pick/player). So your 'reach' term is actually nothing more than a fabrication of the media and placing a value on something that, quite frankly, they're not qualified to judge (because, as I pointed out earlier, there are people smarter and more prepared than them making the actual selections).
I won't say the Patriots are infallible...they've made some poor choices in the past, and it may turn out that some of these selections don't work out. But after listening to Belichick's presser they have some well thought-out and researched reasons for picking the guys they did, so Kiper can put the dreaded 'reach' label on every single pick they made and I'll still be confident in the selections.