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The questions we should be asking...


firstdayfan

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Just read the article about Sal Pal and his interview with hurney. He mentioned at the end of the interview that he feels that the Panthers are going to take Newton. He even threw out some quotes from Hurney talking about Newtons past and his drive for greatness. Here's my question...why did sal only ask about newton???

I understand he is probably going to be the pick but it seems that the media is constantly asking about him...I don't even recall a time where hurney or Rivera bring up newton without being asked first. It scares me the Hurney still doesn't know who to pick...I think that means they want to trade down and if they aren't able to then they take newton. But here's another question...how comfortable are you with a guy if you'd rather trade back than take him??? If we were 100% sold on newton I can't imagine giving that pick away bc you lose newton. Either hurney is an idiot or he is a genius...I personally have no clue which it is...

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I also really really really do not think Hurney knows who he wants to pick at all

If there in fact is this much questioning around Cam in Hurney's eyes, why risk your job on it after it was just saved and you're on thin ice?

I dunno. fuc k

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You ask questions as reporters not looking for direct answers but the indirect ones. What does he say and not realize it and what does he not say which is something important within itself. GMs have every bit the power to steer the conversation as well.

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I also really really really do not think Hurney knows who he wants to pick at all

If there in fact is this much questioning around Cam in Hurney's eyes, why risk your job on it after it was just saved and you're on thin ice?

I dunno. fuc k

Will he be on thin ice if he passes on Cam and Cam is great and wins a super bowl while we are still trying to figure out how to get out of the NFC South cellar?? I sure hope so.

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Just read the article about Sal Pal and his interview with hurney. He mentioned at the end of the interview that he feels that the Panthers are going to take Newton. He even threw out some quotes from Hurney talking about Newtons past and his drive for greatness. Here's my question...why did sal only ask about newton???

I understand he is probably going to be the pick but it seems that the media is constantly asking about him...I don't even recall a time where hurney or Rivera bring up newton without being asked first. It scares me the Hurney still doesn't know who to pick...I think that means they want to trade down and if they aren't able to then they take newton. But here's another question...how comfortable are you with a guy if you'd rather trade back than take him??? If we were 100% sold on newton I can't imagine giving that pick away bc you lose newton. Either hurney is an idiot or he is a genius...I personally have no clue which it is...

Hurney wants to trade out, but is starting to realize he cannot. I think the press conference today was to let everyone know that he may put the trade chart down if a deal helps the Panthers. I think he would take a second to trade down 3-4 spots.

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    • Good thought and I agree.  Nothing about this process compromises that premise. In fact, the process involves meeting more needs so you can do that.  If I can get an Edge on a rookie contract when my biggest need is LB, then I have enough $$ saved on the overall cap to get an elite rookie edge in the draft and sign a veteran LB in free agency. If I draft the LB first, my biggest need, then my savings against the cap (when looking at the 53-man roster) is minimal.  I have not saved enough $$ to sign the edge in free agency, so I have to try to draft the edge later, getting a lesser player.  Even if you draft an edge and the roster is full of them, you have trade capital because a lot of teams need a good edge.  This lends credence to the BPA theory if it is aligned with positions that are expensive on second contracts. In the cap era, you have to think it through-it is like a puzzle.   That is why I did not like it when Marty was drafting RBs (Willliams and Stewart) in the first round.  If you recall, that necessitated moving up for Otah, trading away next year's first rounder to do so.  That is the draft we really needed an edge, but since we did not have a first rounder, we took Everette Brown to fill that need.  Then it got worse.  We had 2 RBs on second contracts, Brown busted, that led to drafting Clausen, etc.  If you can get 2 starters for the price of one, that is what I would call smart--not overthinking, if I understand you.  I do agree, but that does not mean draft your trench players first.   It could mean draft an edge and use the cap savings to sign a trench player.
    • The DLine needs to do its job too - currently I only trust Brown to do that.
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