https://www.nbcsports.com/edge/article/rankings/thors-nfc-snap-draft-gradesThis guy not a huge gutey fan
Quote:
GREEN BAY PACKERS | SNAP GRADE: F
Draft capital: 26 | Talent acquired: 29 | Value: 32
Pick Name Pos Rk Comp HT WT RAS
1.29 Eric Stokes CB8 56 Sidney Jones 6'1 194 9.37
2.62 Josh Myers iOL11 99 Tyler Biadasz 6'5 310 ---
3.85 Amari Rodgers WR22 149 Devin Duvernay 5'10 211 5.37
4.142 Royce Newman iOL15 144 Brandon Shell 6'5 310 8.73
5.173 Tedarrell Slaton DL16 185 Khyri Thornton 6'4 330 7.96
5.178 Shemar Jean-Charles CB41 320 Mackensie Alexander 5'10 184 4.27
6.214 Cole Van Lanen OT26 349 Tanner Hawkinson 6'4 305 8.5
6.220 Isaiah McDuffie LB17 158 Matthew Adams 6'1 227 7.33
7.256 Kylin Hill RB14 198 Marion Barber 5'10 214 7.31
Packers GM Brian Gutekunst appears to be in over his head. Last year, with a Super Bowl contending roster and only one glaring need -- receiver -- Gutekunst elected to trade up in R1 to select QB Jordan Love, a raw developmental dice-roll of a quarterback coming off a 17-interception season in the Mountain West. In last year’s snap grades, I called that decision “bizarre, organizationally.” With QB Aaron Rodgers reportedly unwilling to return to the Packers under Gutekunst, Gutey is facing loaded revolvers from both sides that he himself loaded for reasons that remain unclear: Unload Rodgers in order to save his job, almost assuredly on a discount; or call his bluff and put the organization to a decision -- a plan that, even if it works and both he and Rodgers are in Green Bay next fall, seems assured of alienating the prickly Rodgers and dividing the locker room while leaving last year’s R1 pick, Love, to rot on the bench. Last draft, following the Love pick, Gutey continued to eschew position need -- no receivers were taken whatsoever -- but did so with a series of bizarre reaches. There wasn’t a flashy, controversial pick to light up talk radio this time around. And Gutey even more or less attempted to address his positions of need. But he seems to have a habit of zeroing in on specific prospects and targeting them with pre-delineated picks, not only missing the potential to steal prospects who are falling, but locking himself into over-picking. For instance, he finally did get around to that receiver need with 3.85, but bizarrely took Amari Rogers, a glorified running back in the Ty Montgomery mold that only catches screen passes and the like. Gutekunst’s decisions in the last two drafts have ironically put him on his own sort of shot clock. His predecessor is going to step into a situation far worse than he did barring a rabbit-in-the-hat revelation of Love turning out to be a star.