Conventonal for some. But unwise to others. Year after year we see teams trading up and getting burned by busts. And yes Vernon Gholston is one of those cautionary tales that bear repeating.
Gholston's scouting report]Vernon Gholston Scouting Report - 2008 NFL Draft Prospect:
"Vernon Gholston is quickly becoming a force to be reckoned with. Gholston started all 12 regular season games at DE for the Ohio State for the second straight year. The fourth year junior finished with 15.5 tackles for loss this season, 14 of them sacks. The 6'4", 264 lbs. Buckeye is practically a fixture in opposing backfields the last two seasons. In November, he could be seen abusing the vaunted Michigan O-Line for 3 sacks and was the only man to beat Jake Long for a sack this season."
Gholston looked like a 'can't-miss-prospect' and the Jets took the bait. What did they give up in the process to get a guy who has produced ZERO sacks his entire NFL career and who was recently cut loose? A cap killing 5 year/40m dollar deal for an unproven rookie in 2008. Expect those numbers to be even higher for 2011.
"The New York Jets have reached a five-year contract agreement with first-round draft pick Vernon Gholston that includes $21 million in guarantees, culminating negotiations that continued into the early morning hours.
The linebacker's deal could max out at $50 million if he reaches all of his performance clauses. If the No. 6 pick does not, the deal would still be worth $32.5 million." Source:
Gholston's contract with Jets includes $21M in guaranteed money - NFL - ESPN
The Jets crippled their salary cap for 3 years and gave up over $21m in guaranteed money that they'll never get back. They also had to wates one of their precious 53 man roster slots each of those seasons on a guy who would never produce. The Jets didn't just lose money they tied up valuable resources in the hope that the 'switch' would eventually turn on for their big investment.
Oh and who is being touted this year, isn't it Von Miller in the top 3 or 5? What do scouts say about him?
One said:
"Positives: Extremely disruptive pass rusher, is great at collapsing the pocket and forcing quarterbacks to step into pressure, forcing bad decisions... Has a high motor, is asked to blitz constantly and does not stop pursuing the quarterback until the ball is downfield... Can deliver crushing blows to opposing quarterback if he takes the right angle, tackles through opponents and does not stop at first contact... Very good at wrap-up tackling, begins many tackles at hip level and then maintains force while wrapping legs of ball carrier... Incredible production, had 27 sacks in the last two seasons.."
But another said:
“[Miller's] got some Vernon Gholston in him,” former NFL scout Dave Razzano told Matt Maiocco of CSNBayArea.com.
Razzano spent two decades as an NFL Scout. His opinion differs sharply from those who see Miller as one of the safer picks in the draft.
“I’m not a big Von Miller fan,” Razzano said. “In looking at Big-12 tape, he does not have a motor. He doesn’t chase hard. They run at him, and he doesn’t fight off blockers. When he gets sacks, a lot of times he’s not getting blocked. He’s a one-move guy.”
FYI the proposed rookie salary cap. Even if one is agreed to, there's no way it will be applied retroactively to the 2011 draft because this draft was held under the old CBA. And every qualifed agent out there is a lawyer. How do you think the NFL fancies 32 lawsuits in the 1st round alone? So a 'rookie cap' is NOT gonna happen till 2012 at the earliest even if AGREED upon.
People here are also proposing trading THREE picks for ONE for the privilege of drafting a possible bust. The higher up you go, the riskier you get because the more you can lose. Whereas if you draft THREE players, maybe some of them bust out but you have a chance of at least 1 or 2 of them working out well for you. And chances are the finacials for 3 players taken at picks 17, 28, and 60 will be less overall than the player taken at pick #5. That's how crazy rookie salaries have gotten. The 2008 Gholston contract is probably puny compared to what a rookie drafted at #6 or higher will command in 2011.
In other words, I am VEHEMENTLY on the verge of ALLERGICALLY against trading up multiple valuable resources on what by definition is a risk. The draft is a crapshoot. The only senisble way to hedge against the inevitable busts, and every gambler thinks they are proof against this, like the people saying the Pats scouting is SO GREAT, they could never MESS UP A PICK!, say hello to Laurence Maroney and Chad Jackon for me, well I have news, IT HAPPENS!
So let's try to keep our expectations reasonable instead of dreaming up these pie in the sky fantasies. That impact player might not be the guy drafted at #1, #5, or even #17. The All-Pro waiting to happen instant impact guy might be waiting right there at 28 for a patient, smart, and shrewd draft manager to scoop up and plug into his starting lineup, Devin McCourty says HI!