Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

A draft day trade is imminent,the Beathard-Hurney effect


Recommended Posts

everybody knows that martey hurney is a bobby beathard protege,and everybody knows that hurney has made some type of draft day trade every year he has been here. most of the trades have been giving up future picks in exchange to move up into a particular round,or to get additional particular round picks. that is the bobby beathard way and it won him a few superbowls a long the way,but he also picked ryan leaf over manning.hurney has continued to go into each draft with the bobby beathard mentality,and this year will be no different. it will not surprise me one bit to see the panthers trade for another first round pick this year and give up future picks. look at what beathard did at one point in his career.

http://www.sptimes.com/News/050400/Sports/Don_t_judge_Beathard_.shtml

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I Think that there is about 3 to 4 teams that will be willing to trade up to the number 1 overall pick. And i believe those teams are the Arizona Cardinals, Washington Redskins, Cincinnati Bengals and the Minnesota Vikings. But I will put my Money on Arizona and Cincinnati...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I Think that there is about 3 to 4 teams that will be willing to trade up to the number 1 overall pick. And i believe those teams are the Arizona Cardinals, Washington Redskins, Cincinnati Bengals and the Minnesota Vikings. But I will put my Money on Arizona and Cincinnati...

the only realistic 2 from those teams are arizona and cincy...minnesota is too far back and washington doesn't have the ammo to move up

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Clausen may very well be dealt to a team this year if the CBA is hammered out before the draft.

If that happens someone needs to be fired. A second round pick who had zero investment completely wasted. I disagree with that though because our FO isn't that worthless, hopefully.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If that happens someone needs to be fired. A second round pick who had zero investment completely wasted. I disagree with that though because our FO isn't that worthless, hopefully.

You would in your backwards thinking. Last time I checked trading a player was not a wast.

Wait a minute!

was a new CBA agreed upon?

LOL I wish, but the likelihood of it happening before the draft is slim to none.

I was just throwing it out there so if it happens I can come back later and brag.:D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Sure it does, maybe not every position and not every draft.  You have to admit the hit rate goes down the further in the draft you get.  Would you more readily find a generational talent at the #2 pick or #19 pick?  High picks are considered "busts" if they doesn't pan out, whereas guys drafted later don't have that level of scrutiny upon them.  Different expectation levels.  If Styles does indeed go #2, I already listed the rarefied air that he would be in.  Maybe he doesn't set the League on fire, but my gut feeling is he does.  Again, you don't take an off-ball LB #2 if he is just a 'really good' player.
    • To illustrate my point, I watched (and commented on the Huddle) that Rozeboom would often wait a full second (or close to it) before taking his first step.  I assume that he probably had issues with false steps, a faulty practice that can take an ILB out of the gap completely.  Watch Luke and you see a step with the snap, and rarely was it a false step.  Rozeboom may have had 100 tackles (speculating) but initial contact was 2-3 yards on the defensive side of the ball.  Luke's 100 tackles were made 1-2 yards from the LOS.  Over the course of a year, Luke was much more productive (more fumbles, fewer long gainers, more OL penalties, fewer first downs, etc) that Rozeboom, but on the stat sheet, they both had 100 tackles.  In fact, Rozeboom's inefficiency kept him on the field more (more first downs, fewer OL penalties, turnovers, and punts) so he should have MORE tackles.   I would like to see stats that break down those things.   For example again, Josh Norman was slow--4.68 or so at CB.  However, his anticipation speed was incredible.  He made as many plays as a 4.4 CB.  I had one coach (college--later became the head coach at WCU) tell me that slower players have to use their brains more to still be around.  Elite athletes can just get by on their physical superiority.  He added, "Rarely does a football player run full speed.  Most of the time, they are not, so the 40 time is misleading stat.  Smart players overcome shortcomings--when the elite athlete becomes average (slows with age, advances in level of competition) they struggle against smarter (football IQ) competition.  
    • Obviously tongue in cheek hyperbole. But we do not need a first round RB to compete for a championship. We need intelligent roster building. That to me is the complete opposite of intelligent roster building because it is a prime resource at a devalued plug and play position when we have needs across the defense.
×
×
  • Create New...