dave mcbride Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 1 hour ago, MrEpsYtown said: Honestly, in a draft like this, grabbing those former 5 star recruits isn't the worst way to do business. Play the risk reward game. Bryan Bresee, Drew Sanders, Gervon Dexter, Trenton Simpson, Wanya Morris, Zach Harrison, Justin Shorter... Anyway here is an article with all the 5 star guys in this draft: https://www.pff.com/news/draft-2023-nfl-draft-former-five-star-recruits-bryce-young-jalen-carter-will-anderson-jr Stefon Diggs was a five-star recruit! He went in the fifth round (bad qb at Maryland, some injuries). Just sayin'. 1 Quote
MrEpsYtown Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 39 minutes ago, finn said: Or Fred Rouse, Willie Williams, Ryan Perrilloux, Ben Olson, James Banks, Darrell Scott, Mitch Mustain, Kyle Wright..... https://bleacherreport.com/articles/699015-college-football-recruiting-the-20-worst-5-star-recruiting-busts-of-the-2000s Yeah I get it…The original point was that some of these big time recruits suffered in their development because of covid, and my point was that in a very weak draft, it makes sense to play that upside. Mitch Mustain didn’t have to deal with covid, so the comparisons here are moot. Ofcourse there are misses every class. 1 Quote
gonzo1105 Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 1 minute ago, MrEpsYtown said: Yeah I get it…The original point was that some of these big time recruits suffered in their development because of covid, and my point was that in a very weak draft, it makes sense to play that upside. Mitch Mustain didn’t have to deal with covid, so the comparisons here are moot. Ofcourse there are misses every class. Just randomly chucking out Mitch Mustain as the example I loved it and laughed. Quote
BADOLBILZ Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 1 hour ago, MrEpsYtown said: Honestly, in a draft like this, grabbing those former 5 star recruits isn't the worst way to do business. Play the risk reward game. Bryan Bresee, Drew Sanders, Gervon Dexter, Trenton Simpson, Wanya Morris, Zach Harrison, Justin Shorter... Anyway here is an article with all the 5 star guys in this draft: https://www.pff.com/news/draft-2023-nfl-draft-former-five-star-recruits-bryce-young-jalen-carter-will-anderson-jr So 35 of the players eligible for this draft are former 5 star recruits. To put that in perspective for non-followers of college football/recruiting.........there are typically less than 30 in a recruiting class. So to be honest, I think it's been something of a surprise that this draft has ended up being viewed so poorly given the potential a lot of these players showed as recruits and even early in their careers. Last year at this time there was a lot of "yeah but wait til' next year.......Jalen Carter is the best defender on the Georgia team and Will Anderson probably would have been the #1 pick if he declared" etc... Addison, Njigba, Tillman, Hutchinson.........those were all guys who probably would have had 1st and 2nd round grades in a much better WR class if they came out. 2022 just really wasn't a great year for development of players from those 2019-2020 recruiting classes. 2 Quote
MrEpsYtown Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 3 minutes ago, dave mcbride said: Stefon Diggs was a five-star recruit! He went in the fifth round (bad qb at Maryland, some injuries). Just sayin'. It’s probably a lazy comparison by me, but I see some Diggs in Rakim Jarrett. Similar size, speed and profile and former 5 star guy. Quote
BADOLBILZ Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 5 minutes ago, MrEpsYtown said: It’s probably a lazy comparison by me, but I see some Diggs in Rakim Jarrett. Similar size, speed and profile and former 5 star guy. Yeah and just maybe this draft will turn out to be an opportunity to steal some talent like Jarrett because some GM's are writing it off as a bad year. I wouldn't throw my process out the window for any draft. A couple years ago this class looked like it might have both a high floor and ceiling. There were A BUNCH of guys who one could envision as #1 overall picks. There are no guarantees that next year or the year after will be better overall groups. I think, as football fans, we all wonder about the impact of lower participation in youth football on the NFL pipeline at positions other than QB. I really would not be surprised to see the lesser roster with the better QB win most of the SB's in this decade(like we just saw).......and that colors my idea on team building if I am a GM. 1 1 Quote
BADOLBILZ Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 22 minutes ago, dave mcbride said: Stefon Diggs was a five-star recruit! He went in the fifth round (bad qb at Maryland, some injuries). Just sayin'. Yep you can always find 5 stars scattered around the board but when you have draft evaluators with close to HALF as many 1st rounders in a given draft than normal.......and that draft also has more 5 stars than average........that's a bit of an unusual combination. If we can't blame covid for disrupting critical, early career development.......then it may also more broadly indicate that the pipeline in general is not healthy. Which is even less encouraging to consider. Quote
thenorthremembers Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 11 minutes ago, MrEpsYtown said: He probably likes ranch too. I heard none of his college teammates were at his birthday party...just sayin. 2 Quote
LabattBlue Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 1st round grade, 2nd round grade? What is the difference? What is the numerical grade they get? If a 1st rounder is anything above a 7.0(just for example purposes), a guy graded 6.9 is terrible because he is considered a 2nd round grade? Quote
NewEra Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 4 hours ago, Warriorspikes51 said: Joe B seems to think a Trade Up for a WR is likely 6) Who fits the profile this year? Luckily for the Bills, that specific type of receiver makes up most of the top prospects. And in the first round, it boils down to four who should be a legitimate option at No. 27. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Ohio State – He mainly played slot receiver at Ohio State, but possesses the skills to move outside. He’s an outstanding, nuanced route runner with the shiftiness and agility to punish interior coverage defenders. At nearly 6-foot-1 and 196 pounds, the biggest of these four. Zay Flowers, Boston College – Has experience playing both the perimeter and inside at slot, but at 5-foot-9, he’s the shortest prospect of these four. Flowers was an outstanding downfield target who’s a lot of fun to watch his speed of getting in and out of his breakdown. He is excellent at gaining yards after the catch, too. Jordan Addison, USC – Addison mostly played the perimeter last year but mainly played as a slot receiver in 2021 at Pitt, so the versatility is there. He is right there with Smith-Njigba as a route runner and gains instant separation. Stylistically, Addison runs his routes similarly to Diggs. The troubling factor is that he weighed 173 pounds at his Pro Day. Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee – The biggest projection of the four but with a legitimately high ceiling. Hyatt mostly played slot receiver and needs to develop his full route tree, but he comes from the same offense that yielded Davis, which could concern the Bills less than others. Like Addison, Hyatt is smaller at 176 pounds but has better deep-field speed. If I had to rank them from a Bills’ perspective, I would probably put Smith-Njigba as the top prospect because he’d be an instant impact as their primary slot receiver. Flowers and Addison would rank 2A and 2B, as both could be excellent contributors in 2023. Either one would be worthy of a move up the board. Hyatt comes in fourth only because he’s more of a projection, though not far behind. But the Bills may have Hyatt a closer to the other two based on their comfortability with the college offense. If the Bills stayed at No. 27 and those first three are off the board, I would not be surprised if Hyatt is the selection. 7) What about TCU’s Quentin Johnston? You may notice he’s missing among the above fits, but it’s because he doesn’t fit that versatile role we laid out as cleanly. Johnston isn’t as shifty as the others and, because of some tightness, doesn’t seem as suited to playing slot receiver as easily as the others. His best fit in the Bills’ offense likely would be in the Davis perimeter role, and the Bills may want to keep Davis for the long term. But if they were trying to find a replacement for Davis past 2023, Johnston would be in the equation. 😎 Why the Bills may need to get aggressive once the WR run starts Even though the top receivers may lack a high-end prospect, that doesn’t reduce the receiver need of teams ahead of the Bills. Early in the pre-draft process, Smith-Njigba was going off the board as early as No. 11 to the Titans, but that has slowly been pushed down with some of the really plugged-in draft pundits. The thought-provoking Peter Schrager of NFL.com had Smith-Njigba off the board at No. 15. In his most recent mock, The Athletic draft expert Dane Brugler had Smith-Njigba being the first receiver selected at No. 20. The Bills will obviously be in a much better spot if the run starts at Brugler’s projection. But the one thing they have in common is picks 20 through 26 being a hot spot for receivers getting selected. So if the Bills want one, they might need to be proactive — and we all know Beane tends to get antsy in the first round. 11) So then what are the ideal trade-up spots that meet cost and logic? This is a layered answer, because it all depends on who is available. If Smith-Njigba is still on the board at No. 20, that would be a potential spot to target because the Seahawks may want him, and the Ravens could be interested. Seattle has a long history of trading down on draft day, too. The Chargers would be another spot to target either Smith-Njigba or the pick of the second-best wide receiver if the Chargers wanted a tight end above all else. They’d still stay ahead of the Bengals at No. 28, while the Jaguars and Cowboys aren’t as big of threats to take one. Plus, the depth of the tight end class could help. But the higher cost might be prohibitive if the Bills are moving up for the second-best receiver. The Ravens likely aren’t moving off a pick for another team to take a receiver. The Vikings and Jaguars don’t seem immediate threats to take a receiver, but the Giants are, which makes the Jaguars at No. 24 potentially the ideal trade-up spot to target. It would cost the Bills to drop 30 picks from No. 91, but that’s an entirely doable cost to potentially secure the second or third-best receiver in this year’s class. But if they don’t want to chance it with the Jaguars, the Vikings have only five picks this year, and would likely be very, very willing trade participants, potentially with the Bills getting a better value on a trade than usual. No. 23 or No. 24 looks like the sweet spot of any Bills draft day trade up. Good post. The only thing I’d disagree with is the Vikings aren’t a threat to take a WR. I expect them to take a WR early. Trading down would be ideal for them, as you said…. But if they can’t find someone to trade with, they are absolutely a threat to go WR 1 Quote
dave mcbride Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 43 minutes ago, BADOLBILZ said: Yep you can always find 5 stars scattered around the board but when you have draft evaluators with close to HALF as many 1st rounders in a given draft than normal.......and that draft also has more 5 stars than average........that's a bit of an unusual combination. If we can't blame covid for disrupting critical, early career development.......then it may also more broadly indicate that the pipeline in general is not healthy. Which is even less encouraging to consider. Given what I know is going on in schools and colleges because of covid over the last couple of years, it wouldn't surprise me at all that this group was screwed up by it. One of my best friends is a fifth-grade teacher and has told me that covid has broken kids. And a close friend who is a Vanderbilt prof told me the same thing about college students there. 1 2 Quote
Chaos Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 3 hours ago, GunnerBill said: Again, in a discussion yesterday with @Chaos a similar point was made. attaching "rounds" to it can potentially be confusing for some people. Personally I think it makes it simpler but don't call them rounds if in your mind you equate a round with 32 picks. Call them tiers. Call them clusters. Call them groups. Whatever you want. I am definitely not the only one. I was listening to the podcast Rick Speilman has been doing this year on my morning commute he said he "rarely" had more than 18 true first round grades in his 10 plus years with the Vikings. It is the way NFL teams work. I designed my grading system after talking to someone who has been in draft rooms. When Brandon Beane says he would trade back if his first round is cleared out he means the guys in the first tier on his board. Teams grade and then brigade by round which is what I do. But you could easily call it something else. The NFL system seems the most sophisticated and useful grading system: Quote
GunnerBill Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 23 minutes ago, Chaos said: The NFL system seems the most sophisticated and useful grading system: We are all using versions of the same thing. The fact the NFL doesn't apply the "rounds" moniker to it is the only difference. I get some people find that unhelpful. Personally I find it quite useful shorthand for distinguishing between levels. Quote
Chaos Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 5 minutes ago, GunnerBill said: We are all using versions of the same thing. The fact the NFL doesn't apply the "rounds" moniker to it is the only difference. I get some people find that unhelpful. Personally I find it quite useful shorthand for distinguishing between levels. I like that the values make easy to understand statements 8.0= Perennial All-Pro. for example. Does not mean the evaluator is correct, there is just no dispute about what he mean. What does first round grade translate too in your system? Quote
BADOLBILZ Posted April 24, 2023 Posted April 24, 2023 16 minutes ago, GunnerBill said: We are all using versions of the same thing. The fact the NFL doesn't apply the "rounds" moniker to it is the only difference. I get some people find that unhelpful. Personally I find it quite useful shorthand for distinguishing between levels. The fact that they all use the same system for a highly subjective analysis if proof that it's a great system. I take it all with a grain. I just stacked players in the order I valued them for that specific draft. The numerical value you apply is of not much value if the overall quality of the group is not the same from year to year........which it's not. And using that number system to compare players of other drafts would have more merit if the whole process wasn't so wildly subjective to begin with. But if I were employing a bunch of gym teachers to evaluate talent for me I would probably use a system just like that too. It's corporate 101. Helps keep everyone easily replaceable. You don't want to see what hiring Ivy League minds to create EFFICIENT systems to boil your sport down to an extract does to the entertainment value of the entire process. 1 Quote
GunnerBill Posted April 25, 2023 Posted April 25, 2023 4 hours ago, Chaos said: I like that the values make easy to understand statements 8.0= Perennial All-Pro. for example. Does not mean the evaluator is correct, there is just no dispute about what he mean. What does first round grade translate too in your system? In my system a 7.0 to 7.9 is a first roubd grade and equates to either: 10 year starter at a premium position, or elite potential within 2 years at a non-premium position. That is where from what I understand I most differ from what a lot of NFL teams do because I build positional value into my grading. What most NFL teams do is grade and then apply positional value when they build their board. But I am not building a team specific board, mine is a conventional big board, so I have to find another way of recognising it and so I build it into my grading scale. 2 Quote
BADOLBILZ Posted April 25, 2023 Posted April 25, 2023 5 minutes ago, GunnerBill said: In my system a 7.0 to 7.9 is a first roubd grade and equates to either: 10 year starter at a premium position, or elite potential within 2 years at a non-premium position. That is where from what I understand I most differ from what a lot of NFL teams do because I build positional value into my grading. What most NFL teams do is grade and then apply positional value when they build their board. But I am not building a team specific board, mine is a conventional big board, so I have to find another way of recognising it and so I build it into my grading scale. Do you have a positional value chart to help with your math? I had a scale where the QB position was worth 10.......a much more sensible top end number to use than the intentionally weird 4-8 grading system. Pass rusher 1 and LT were worth a 4 and then it gradually slid down by fractions from there. Quote
Dan in Owego Posted April 25, 2023 Posted April 25, 2023 2 minutes ago, BADOLBILZ said: Do you have a positional value chart to help with your math? I had a scale where the QB position was worth 10.......a much more sensible top end number to use than the intentionally weird 4-8 grading system. Pass rusher 1 and LT were worth a 4 and then it gradually slid down by fractions from there. Hey everybody it's someone pushing the metric system 🧐😂 Quote
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