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Good McShay article on the Draft


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http://insider.espn.go.com/nfl/draft10/ins...tory?id=4907951

 

An NFL scout recently told me, "Even after all these years, we don't have a Moneyball formula for success. But we are getting closer." Until then, the NFL draft will remain about as unscientific as any sports endeavor. As long as scouts and GMs have to scramble to evaluate roughly 1,000 college football players at four different levels, every now and then a Pierre Garçon (Mount Union, sixth-round pick) is going to have more catches in one season than a Mike Williams (USC, first round) will have in a career.

 

So what's that scout talking about? Well, just because there's no secret to guaranteeing a sweet draft doesn't mean there aren't some must-follow tendencies that can help avoid disasters. As we head to the scouting combine, which starts on Feb. 24, then on to draft day, here are some mistakes the know-it-all suits shouldn't make. (But most assuredly will.)

 

1. They will ignore the big four. At the top of the draft, four crucial positions -- QB, offensive tackle, cornerback and pass- rusher -- should trump all others. It's a supply- and-demand thing. As the league's emphasis on passing puts those positions at an ever-greater premium, the elite talent pool at those spots remains basically the same. Notice wide receivers aren't included on this A-list. You can get them anytime. Two of this season's top five wideouts -- Miles Austin and Wes Welker -- weren't even drafted. On the other hand, all five of 2009's leaders in QB ratings were among the first 33 picks. Catchers depend on passers, not the other way around.

 

Look at this season's Super Bowl teams. At the big-four positions, the Saints and Colts combined to produce five Pro Bowlers. The average draft position of those guys was 44; two were first-rounders, two others early second-rounders. The teams generated nine more Pro Bowlers from the other positions. Those guys were drafted, on average, with the 80th pick, not including Colts center Jeff Saturday, who was undrafted. The Chargers (five of their past six first-rounders played one of the big-four positions) get it. The Lions (four wideouts and a linebacker in the top 10 between 2003 and 2007) don't.

 

So while All-America safety Eric Berry is tempting, the St. Louis Rams shouldn't think twice about snatching a defensive tackle, Ndamukong Suh or Gerald McCoy, at No. 1. A combo of Suh and, say, LSU safety Chad Jones (a likely second-round pick) will win more games than Berry and, say, second-round DT Dan Williams will.

 

Marc Serota/Getty ImagesIs it wise to take a defensive tackle like Gerald McCoy with your number one pick?

 

2. They will be seduced by looks. Scouts, GMs, even esteemed members of the media get too wrapped up in 40 times and 225-pound bench press reps. In many cases -- see: Smith, Akili; Jones, Matt; Gholston, Vernon -- superhuman physical gifts make usually rational minds race with possibilities. It's why you'll hear about Tim Tebow playing H-back soon. Too often, scouts think a freakish body automatically translates into freakish success. It doesn't.

 

I've heard the buzz as it happens. Did you see that?! The furor overwhelms reasonable analysis. Mistakes and shortcomings that pop up on film or the police blotter fade into the background. Coaches are especially optimistic about being able to turn raw athletic ability into refined production. They think they can take special athletes and coach 'em to become special football players. Good luck with that. Meanwhile, guys like Clay Matthews and Austin Collie slide down the draft board, then make an immediate impact. The same arc will be followed this year by Texas WR Jordan Shipley and Penn State DT Jared Odrick. Neither will be a combine terror. They'll be happy to make their noise in the NFL.

 

3. They will pay no mind to minds. As one scout told me recently, "You can't win with dumb players in the NFL anymore." This Jeff George-inspired rule isn't so much about human intelligence as football intelligence, not book-smart guys but playbook-smart guys.

 

And yet book-smart evaluators still pay too much attention to academic All-America teams and the Wonderlic test. A 4.0 GPA or 40 on the Wonderlic doesn't necessarily mean a player will be able to read a screen or outfox a defender. Savvy GMs know the least-seen part of a player's combine performance, the personal interview, is the most important gauge. To be fair, more front office people are watching film with players and giving them pop quizzes to see what they've got between their earholes.

 

The importance of mental agility is starting to sink in. Rey Maualuga had first-round athleticism but slid to the second because teams saw the blunders he made in diagnosing plays and how he relied too much on raw ability to compensate. Maualuga had a solid rookie season for the Bengals (63 tackles), but it is now clear why he was the third USC LB drafted in 2009.

 

Here's a good test for this season's GMs. Watch where South Florida DE Jason Pierre-Paul goes in comparison to Georgia Tech DE Derrick Morgan. Pierre-Paul is a physical freak, and a team may get flak for passing him by to get to Morgan. But what that team will know is that Morgan is far more versatile and game aware than his counterpart, who hasn't shown much more than pure pass-rushing ability.

 

"You can't win with dumb players in the NFL anymore."

 

4. They will choose need over value. Everyone who has a say in a team's draft starts with the idea that the biggest holes need to be filled first. It's a fair philosophy in a football utopia. But in the real world, hole-filling can't be the only -- or primary -- factor in determining which guy to take.

 

Look at what the Vikings did in the 2007 draft. After scoring only 17.6 ppg, they needed help on the offensive line, a replacement for QB Brad Johnson and a serious upgrade over No. 1 receiver Travis Taylor. The only solid spot in the offense, in fact, was running back, where 27-year-old Chester Taylor had gained 1,504 yards from scrimmage. But necessity didn't force Minnesota to reach for Brady Quinn or Ted Ginn Jr. at No. 7. Instead, they went with the best value on the board, some kid named Peterson. Think they wish they'd gone a different way?

 

The Colts are the NFL's best at balancing value and need. In the past four drafts (despite picking after the big-four positions have been poached), they've gone 4-for-4 with top choices: RB Joseph Addai, WR Anthony Gonzalez, OG Mike Pollak and RB Donald Brown. None was a sexy choice. All offered bang for the buck at the spot they were chosen. If team president Bill Polian also filled team needs, well, that was a nifty bonus. More to his point, a perennial contender restocked its shelf with starting-caliber players.

 

The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

 

And if all else fails, they can try to trade with the Raiders.

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I agree with everything you said, but I dont believe CBs are anywhere near as important as your post said they were. In todays NFL CBS cannot even breathe on a WR before being flagged. I believe its more about who is rushing the passer helping out the CB than the other way around - the rules simply do not allow CB to cover anymore. the great corners used to cover a WR very tight, but not thats illegal. Its much more the front 7 is much more important that the D Backfield, as proven by our Bills.

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The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

 

And if all else fails, they can try to trade with the Raiders.

Those who understand football have been pointing this out for years.

On the other end of the spectrum, folks like C. Biscuit loved the McCargo pick. :bag:

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Only problem with his analysis is that while Lynch and McKelvin haven't yet worked out (I still think McKelvin will), neither one of them were reaches and it could be argued that neither one of them were drafted as need picks at the time either.

 

It obviously would have worked out better if they took Revis ahead of Lynch and Clady instead of McKelvin but if I can use 20/20, I would change those 5 or 6 times they passed on Tom Brady in 2000.

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Those who understand football have been pointing this out for years.

On the other end of the spectrum, folks like C. Biscuit loved the McCargo pick. :bag:

 

the only real flaw in his article is we need a QB. You can't win in this league without a stud QB. These 'game managers' don't get it done any longer. If you don't have a cat at the QB position that scares teams and has the other teams respect, you won't win ****.

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the only real flaw in his article is we need a QB. You can't win in this league without a stud QB. These 'game managers' don't get it done any longer. If you don't have a cat at the QB position that scares teams and has the other teams respect, you won't win ****.

No doubt about it but you take value every day of the week and twice on Sunday.

If the QB of the future is there and they are confident that he's the guy, sure take him. But you don't take a QB for the sake of taking a QB. Claussen will get murdered behind this O-Line. There is not only weakness at the tackle position, there's absolutely no depth. Good tackles don't become free agents. We have to spend premium draft picks on the tackle position. If they take some tackles, build up the line, and find a QB in next year's draft it would make far more sense than reaching on a QB now.

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Change your post title, he is correct and did not criticize he stated facts. The past five drafts have been completely destroyed and that is a fact, so if the truth hurts that stinks but it's still the truth.

 

I agree it's the truth, but it's a criticism nonetheless. Doesn't bother me one bit though

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sorry, not trying to be the plagiarism police but don 't forget to add the link to the article b4 the Mods see it...you're not supposed to post articles on TBD w/o links..its plagiarism and could get TBD in trouble...just trying to let you know b4 you get yelled at..lol

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The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

 

The Levy drafts were pretty bad as far as value goes, although they did have SOME success late. Brad Butler and Kyle Williams at 5th round picks is pretty good value. The 2009 draft other than Maybin looks real good value-wise. I think the 7th Rd pick of Lankster is an excellent pick and they didn't even use him to his ability (should have been returning kicks). McKelvin got hurt so that's a bit unfair.

 

Buffalo always seems to over compensate early in the draft for bad/lack-of free-agent moves. I hope Buddy Nix is true to his word that potential draft picks with incomplete histories, and that are one-year wonders aren't picked.

 

Draft players that will SUCCEED in your system (see Colts and Patriots) regardless of position and eventually you will win.

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The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

 

And if all else fails, they can try to trade with the Raiders.

 

gotta call bs on McKelvin and even Lynch. Neither were considered reaches at the time.

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sorry, not trying to be the plagiarism police but don 't forget to add the link to the article b4 the Mods see it...you're not supposed to post articles on TBD w/o links..its plagiarism and could get TBD in trouble...just trying to let you know b4 you get yelled at..lol

 

Thanks! Fixed...

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The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably.

 

 

 

Offensive tackle and quarterback are chief among the Bills' needs, and they should draft a tackle if Davis, Okung or Bulaga is available. This scenario has them selecting the top quarterback prospect in the 2010 class, though. Bradford is a bit of a project because of his slight frame and the spread system he played in at Oklahoma, but he has the football intelligence and accuracy to be molded into a good starter in the NFL

 

Thanks, Mr. McShay.

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No doubt about it but you take value every day of the week and twice on Sunday.

If the QB of the future is there and they are confident that he's the guy, sure take him. But you don't take a QB for the sake of taking a QB. Claussen will get murdered behind this O-Line. There is not only weakness at the tackle position, there's absolutely no depth. Good tackles don't become free agents. We have to spend premium draft picks on the tackle position. If they take some tackles, build up the line, and find a QB in next year's draft it would make far more sense than reaching on a QB now.

I disagree to an extent in that with regard to an elite QB, you're not just drafting for this year, but for five-six years down the road. I don't know if Claussen is a legit top ten pick - opinions vary - but if he is, you take him. He's not going to do much this upcoming year anyway. If they truly feel he's not legit, then grab a guy who is on the offensive or defensive lines.

 

Overall, the story was good, but he's wrong about McKelvin. McKelvin was starting before he got hurt, he wasn't really a need (they had Greer and McGee), and was by all accounts the top CB in the draft (one of McShay's big four positions). So in pretty much every respect, he's off the mark w/regard to McKelvin. The Bills can be criticized for a lot, but not for that.

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I know McShay probably loved tearing into the Bills, but his point about McKelvin is misleading. He makes it seem as if Leodis wasn't the starter b/c of performance when he was really just injured. Before the injury McKelvin was emerging as an explosive ST player and his defense was definitely solid.

 

I expect McKelvin to have a great year this year.

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the only real flaw in his article is we need a QB. You can't win in this league without a stud QB. These 'game managers' don't get it done any longer. If you don't have a cat at the QB position that scares teams and has the other teams respect, you won't win ****.

 

Even Chan Nix said it during the opening PC: Your QB isn't making plays when he's on his back. And on this team, the QB was sacked 46 times in 2009. Sure some of those were holding onto the ball, but the majority were probably bad pass blocking.

 

 

I disagree to an extent in that with regard to an elite QB, you're not just drafting for this year, but for five-six years down the road. I don't know if Claussen is a legit top ten pick - opinions vary - but if he is, you take him. He's not going to do much this upcoming year anyway. If they truly feel he's not legit, then grab a guy who is on the offensive or defensive lines.

 

Poor drafting from 2004-2008 is what has set this team into the mediocre product they are. Some of that is on TD, but Dick Levy added to it with 3 bad drafts from 06-08. If McKelvin, (EDIT: Posluszny), Butler, and Williams, are all the starters you've got out of 3 drafts, it's not good enough to win the ultra competitive AFC East.

 

It's a weak year for QB's, but perhaps strong for OT's. At this early juncture, take the best OT and then build the front 7 on defense.

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The Bills have drafted poorly in the first round but I wouldnt put McKelvin in that group. Let me go on record as saying I hated the pick of McKelvin because of the position he played, not the player. He got hurt last year otherwise he would have been starting at the end of the year. I actually think he is going to be a good player but look how good the secondary was without him.

 

I am not a fan of taking DBs early in the draft (hated the Whitner pick even more). I think CB is the easiest position to fill from the draft as there are always solid corners that can be had after the second round.

 

The Bills have been drafting in the top half of the draft for so long and should have been drafting for quality at the premium hard to fill positions like the offensive and defensive line. I dont care what position Maybin was listed as he is not a DE. Passing on Oher was as big a mistake as passing on Ngata was.

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The Bills have drafted poorly in the first round but I wouldnt put McKelvin in that group. Let me go on record as saying I hated the pick of McKelvin because of the position he played, not the player. He got hurt last year otherwise he would have been starting at the end of the year. I actually think he is going to be a good player but look how good the secondary was without him.

 

I am not a fan of taking DBs early in the draft (hated the Whitner pick even more). I think CB is the easiest position to fill from the draft as there are always solid corners that can be had after the second round.

 

The Bills have been drafting in the top half of the draft and should have been drafting for quality at the premium hard to fill positions like the offensive and defensive line. I dont care what position Maybin was listed as he is not a DE. Passing on Oher was as big a mistake as passing on Ngata.

 

I completely agree man. McKelvin was turning into a dynamic player for us both defensively and on special teams. :bag:

 

I'm REALLY looking forwart to seeing him back in our secondary alongside Byrd!

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Those who understand football have been pointing this out for years.

On the other end of the spectrum, folks like C. Biscuit loved the McCargo pick. :bag:

 

 

You're a flucking idiot who needs to keep my name out your mouth. You only show up to bash Whitner. You're the same idiot who loved Dusty Dvoreck who's played like 5 games in his career. Stop acting liek you are some expert.

 

And I've never loved the McCargo pick. I just am not an overreacting tard like yourself and thoguht he needed time. And he showed flashes in 2006 season. But he was a bust. Now go JO to your Dusty poster and spend all your time trying to trash Whitner. You need to get a life. :bag:

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http://insider.espn.go.com/nfl/draft10/ins...tory?id=4907951

 

 

4. They will choose need over value. Everyone who has a say in a team's draft starts with the idea that the biggest holes need to be filled first. It's a fair philosophy in a football utopia. But in the real world, hole-filling can't be the only -- or primary -- factor in determining which guy to take.

 

Look at what the Vikings did in the 2007 draft. After scoring only 17.6 ppg, they needed help on the offensive line, a replacement for QB Brad Johnson and a serious upgrade over No. 1 receiver Travis Taylor. The only solid spot in the offense, in fact, was running back, where 27-year-old Chester Taylor had gained 1,504 yards from scrimmage. But necessity didn't force Minnesota to reach for Brady Quinn or Ted Ginn Jr. at No. 7. Instead, they went with the best value on the board, some kid named Peterson. Think they wish they'd gone a different way?

 

The Colts are the NFL's best at balancing value and need. In the past four drafts (despite picking after the big-four positions have been poached), they've gone 4-for-4 with top choices: RB Joseph Addai, WR Anthony Gonzalez, OG Mike Pollak and RB Donald Brown. None was a sexy choice. All offered bang for the buck at the spot they were chosen. If team president Bill Polian also filled team needs, well, that was a nifty bonus. More to his point, a perennial contender restocked its shelf with starting-caliber players.

 

The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

And if all else fails, they can try to trade with the Raiders.

 

I think this is all that needs to be said about the upcoming draft.

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Todd McShay has ZERO credibility with me. He had Aaron Maybin ranked in the Top 5 players overall and said he was the pick of the draft in 2009.

 

This only confirms that we shouldn't take a nano-second to pick Jimmy Claussen if he falls to us at #9.

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http://insider.espn.go.com/nfl/draft10/ins...tory?id=4907951

 

An NFL scout recently told me, "Even after all these years, we don't have a Moneyball formula for success. But we are getting closer." Until then, the NFL draft will remain about as unscientific as any sports endeavor. As long as scouts and GMs have to scramble to evaluate roughly 1,000 college football players at four different levels, every now and then a Pierre Garçon (Mount Union, sixth-round pick) is going to have more catches in one season than a Mike Williams (USC, first round) will have in a career.

 

So what's that scout talking about? Well, just because there's no secret to guaranteeing a sweet draft doesn't mean there aren't some must-follow tendencies that can help avoid disasters. As we head to the scouting combine, which starts on Feb. 24, then on to draft day, here are some mistakes the know-it-all suits shouldn't make. (But most assuredly will.)

 

1. They will ignore the big four. At the top of the draft, four crucial positions -- QB, offensive tackle, cornerback and pass- rusher -- should trump all others. It's a supply- and-demand thing. As the league's emphasis on passing puts those positions at an ever-greater premium, the elite talent pool at those spots remains basically the same. Notice wide receivers aren't included on this A-list. You can get them anytime. Two of this season's top five wideouts -- Miles Austin and Wes Welker -- weren't even drafted. On the other hand, all five of 2009's leaders in QB ratings were among the first 33 picks. Catchers depend on passers, not the other way around.

 

Look at this season's Super Bowl teams. At the big-four positions, the Saints and Colts combined to produce five Pro Bowlers. The average draft position of those guys was 44; two were first-rounders, two others early second-rounders. The teams generated nine more Pro Bowlers from the other positions. Those guys were drafted, on average, with the 80th pick, not including Colts center Jeff Saturday, who was undrafted. The Chargers (five of their past six first-rounders played one of the big-four positions) get it. The Lions (four wideouts and a linebacker in the top 10 between 2003 and 2007) don't.

 

So while All-America safety Eric Berry is tempting, the St. Louis Rams shouldn't think twice about snatching a defensive tackle, Ndamukong Suh or Gerald McCoy, at No. 1. A combo of Suh and, say, LSU safety Chad Jones (a likely second-round pick) will win more games than Berry and, say, second-round DT Dan Williams will.

 

Marc Serota/Getty ImagesIs it wise to take a defensive tackle like Gerald McCoy with your number one pick?

 

2. They will be seduced by looks. Scouts, GMs, even esteemed members of the media get too wrapped up in 40 times and 225-pound bench press reps. In many cases -- see: Smith, Akili; Jones, Matt; Gholston, Vernon -- superhuman physical gifts make usually rational minds race with possibilities. It's why you'll hear about Tim Tebow playing H-back soon. Too often, scouts think a freakish body automatically translates into freakish success. It doesn't.

 

I've heard the buzz as it happens. Did you see that?! The furor overwhelms reasonable analysis. Mistakes and shortcomings that pop up on film or the police blotter fade into the background. Coaches are especially optimistic about being able to turn raw athletic ability into refined production. They think they can take special athletes and coach 'em to become special football players. Good luck with that. Meanwhile, guys like Clay Matthews and Austin Collie slide down the draft board, then make an immediate impact. The same arc will be followed this year by Texas WR Jordan Shipley and Penn State DT Jared Odrick. Neither will be a combine terror. They'll be happy to make their noise in the NFL.

 

3. They will pay no mind to minds. As one scout told me recently, "You can't win with dumb players in the NFL anymore." This Jeff George-inspired rule isn't so much about human intelligence as football intelligence, not book-smart guys but playbook-smart guys.

 

And yet book-smart evaluators still pay too much attention to academic All-America teams and the Wonderlic test. A 4.0 GPA or 40 on the Wonderlic doesn't necessarily mean a player will be able to read a screen or outfox a defender. Savvy GMs know the least-seen part of a player's combine performance, the personal interview, is the most important gauge. To be fair, more front office people are watching film with players and giving them pop quizzes to see what they've got between their earholes.

 

The importance of mental agility is starting to sink in. Rey Maualuga had first-round athleticism but slid to the second because teams saw the blunders he made in diagnosing plays and how he relied too much on raw ability to compensate. Maualuga had a solid rookie season for the Bengals (63 tackles), but it is now clear why he was the third USC LB drafted in 2009.

 

Here's a good test for this season's GMs. Watch where South Florida DE Jason Pierre-Paul goes in comparison to Georgia Tech DE Derrick Morgan. Pierre-Paul is a physical freak, and a team may get flak for passing him by to get to Morgan. But what that team will know is that Morgan is far more versatile and game aware than his counterpart, who hasn't shown much more than pure pass-rushing ability.

 

"You can't win with dumb players in the NFL anymore."

 

4. They will choose need over value. Everyone who has a say in a team's draft starts with the idea that the biggest holes need to be filled first. It's a fair philosophy in a football utopia. But in the real world, hole-filling can't be the only -- or primary -- factor in determining which guy to take.

 

Look at what the Vikings did in the 2007 draft. After scoring only 17.6 ppg, they needed help on the offensive line, a replacement for QB Brad Johnson and a serious upgrade over No. 1 receiver Travis Taylor. The only solid spot in the offense, in fact, was running back, where 27-year-old Chester Taylor had gained 1,504 yards from scrimmage. But necessity didn't force Minnesota to reach for Brady Quinn or Ted Ginn Jr. at No. 7. Instead, they went with the best value on the board, some kid named Peterson. Think they wish they'd gone a different way?

 

The Colts are the NFL's best at balancing value and need. In the past four drafts (despite picking after the big-four positions have been poached), they've gone 4-for-4 with top choices: RB Joseph Addai, WR Anthony Gonzalez, OG Mike Pollak and RB Donald Brown. None was a sexy choice. All offered bang for the buck at the spot they were chosen. If team president Bill Polian also filled team needs, well, that was a nifty bonus. More to his point, a perennial contender restocked its shelf with starting-caliber players.

 

The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

 

And if all else fails, they can try to trade with the Raiders.

Thanks for the post, a great read. I know hindsight is 20/20, but I hated the McCargo, Whitner, Mckelvin and Losman picks. What a disaster this team has been during the draft. And to be absolutely honest, Lee Evans doesnt do much for me either, and that kinda sums up this whole team. He needs to start going over the middle and get some YAC.

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McCargo was the 3rd best lineman on a 4 man line for a college team that lost 6 or 7 games that year

 

yet another pick i hated from day one...should have been Mangold and yes i said that before the pick was made

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You're a flucking idiot who needs to keep my name out your mouth. You only show up to bash Whitner. You're the same idiot who loved Dusty Dvoreck who's played like 5 games in his career. Stop acting liek you are some expert.

 

And I've never loved the McCargo pick. I just am not an overreacting tard like yourself and thoguht he needed time. And he showed flashes in 2006 season. But he was a bust. Now go JO to your Dusty poster and spend all your time trying to trash Whitner. You need to get a life. :bag:

I simply said the Bears got the better end of the draft-day deal. Never said Dvoracek is the second-coming, that's your imagination. You, on the other hand, thought McCargo was the real deal. The Matt Millen of TBD at his best. :bag:

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You're a flucking idiot who needs to keep my name out your mouth. You only show up to bash Whitner. You're the same idiot who loved Dusty Dvoreck who's played like 5 games in his career. Stop acting liek you are some expert.

 

And I've never loved the McCargo pick. I just am not an overreacting tard like yourself and thoguht he needed time. And he showed flashes in 2006 season. But he was a bust. Now go JO to your Dusty poster and spend all your time trying to trash Whitner. You need to get a life. :bag:

Sounds like a lovers quarrel.

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I agree with everything you said, but I dont believe CBs are anywhere near as important as your post said they were. In todays NFL CBS cannot even breathe on a WR before being flagged. I believe its more about who is rushing the passer helping out the CB than the other way around - the rules simply do not allow CB to cover anymore. the great corners used to cover a WR very tight, but not thats illegal. Its much more the front 7 is much more important that the D Backfield, as proven by our Bills.

 

 

I don't think the Bills have "proven" that. I think what the Bills have proven, is that if your offense can't score, your not gonna win.

 

Yes, the defense need lots of help up front, but they occasionally stop a team or two. The offense coouldn't score at all. Plus a good offense will help the defense EMOTIONALLY. The defense has nothing to lay their bodies on the line for, because they know full well it's all for naught.

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I simply said the Bears got the better end of the draft-day deal. Never said Dvoracek is the second-coming, that's your imagination. You, on the other hand, thought McCargo was the real deal. The Matt Millen of TBD at his best. :bag:

 

 

I rather be Millen (someone who has actually played the game) than a whining dbag who just shows up to hate on a draft pick that was 4 years ago. DawGG. :bag:

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http://insider.espn.go.com/nfl/draft10/ins...tory?id=4907951

 

The Bills sit on the opposite side of this balancing act. They've consistently targeted need over value and failed miserably. From 2006 to 2008, the Bills reached for DT John McCargo, RB Marshawn Lynch and CB Leodis McKelvin. Not one of them was a starter by the end of this past season. That's a drafting disaster. Buffalo fans had best hope their team has learned its lesson as it debates whether to reach for QB Jimmy Clausen at No. 9. It's a position of need, for sure, but, personally, I see him as the No. 28 prospect in the draft. Buffalo would be better off taking a top offensive tackle, Oklahoma's Trent Williams or Rutgers' Anthony Davis. A QB like Colt McCoy or Tony Pike will be waiting for them later.

 

I ageee with a lot of what he says, but much of this is based on McShay's own ratings. Haloti Ngata should have been taken first instead of drafting Whitner and McCargo. Revis over Lynch should have been the pick the following year, but McKelvin was rated by many as going higher than he did. I don't see McKelvin as a poor value.

 

McShay also has Clausen way lower that just about everybody else who covers the draft. If this is accurate, then yes pass on him. If he's close in value to the #9 pick then take him because the Bills aren't going anywhere until they truly upgrade the QB position.

 

An Anthony Davis/Colt McCoy or Tony Pike draft seems very, very risky to me and a perhaps a worse disaster than any of those other drafts.

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I remember being shocked to hear Marv Levy say that he believed in drafting for need first. Complete stupidity that goes against the basic principles of drafting. The whole Levy/Jauron era was like a bad dream filled with logic defying decisions. But just like then, a lot of you would be on board with Nix if he said that teams should be built from the outside in, or that the importance of the QB has diminished.

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