C_Howitt_Fealz wrote:
I don't understand Angelo's philosophy. Most teams like to stockpile 1st, 2nd and 3rd rounders. Jerry goes for a bunch of 6th and 7th rounders.
You stock those pre-draft. You don't see teams bundling all their lower picks for an extra second rounder on draft day, and for good reason. Most teams do stockpile lower round picks, or at least try to stockpile them. That's why every talking head on TV yesterday spent half his airtime explaining why Team X has to trade down. They go overboard about it, but the point is sound.
[quote=Gecko"]That's the exact argument and opinion I have. We need some guys that arnt total question marks.[/quote]
Pick 49 is hardly a sure thing. The kid from Georgia was, what, the seventh WR off the board? He isn't a total question mark?
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With the aging offensive line and defense, I was hoping we would get a WR and SS that could fill the holes and maybe... give the Bears the chance of getting back into the playoffs, one last time before the offensive line and defense start collecting social security!!
The defense is still quite young outside of Urlacher and the Ogunleye, and the latter needs to be replaced anyway. Your left tackle is going to be one year removed from the draft, one of your guards is only a couple of years removed from the draft, and there will be interior O-line picks in the later rounds, which is where most guards and centers go. I don't think there's a huge window next year anyway, but to the extent there is, it's not closing after 2009. In fact, with a young QB, RB, revamped O-line, and most defensive players still on the right side of 30, its probably just opening.
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I guess I should want depth and future starters to develop out of the draft than guys that can start and help "today". Maybe i'm just bitter over Earl Bennett's of the world.
This team isn't in a position where they should start mortgaging the future to the present, especially insofar as they already lost a significant chip for the future in the 2010 1st rounder. In a perfect world you get a guy who can step in right away and is productive for a long time, but if I had to chose one extreme- tremendous one year wonder, or guy who sits on the bench for a year and does nothing but has a nice career- I'd take the latter, especially for this team. Besides, third rounders step in and produce immediately all the time; while you bring up Earl Bennett, Marcus Harrison played pretty well at DT last year, and he was also a third rounder.
Beardown likes to say that everyone likes to play Mel Kiper on draft day and pretend they know everything about all these players based on that game they say last year on that Thursday night nothing else was on. I'm sure I'm guilty of that as well, but even Mel Kiper has a pretty bad track record at evaluating these guys. The average fan has an ever worse track record than that. We'll know whether the draft was good or bad when we see the product on the field; until then, Angelo has drafted well enough over his career that I'm usually inclined to give his picks the benefit of the doubt.