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It'd been nice to get maybe one more lineman. But I also wonder how much the "value" of the board was skewed by the fact that there was a huge run on OL players. This was considered a deep OL draft, and because of it teams were reaching up into the first round for guys expected to go much later. Kinda skewed the whole group of offensive line players.
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Lets put it this way, Brad Cottam is full of upside unlike players like John Carlson who were taken ahead of him.
Martellus Bennett was someone I loved at TE but Cottam is right up there. |
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There was NO reason to rush out and draft every available lineman at each position. This team is at least one more solid draft away from 8-8. And that's only if Croyle doesn't completely suck. |
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Um, he DID completely suck. He was 0-6. Let's just stop with the fucking bullshit about Croyle, right now. He didn't will a team to victory. He didn't will a team to a tie. He didn't even will a team to be competitive. He sucked. What's fucking ironic is that a bunch of the fuckers on the 'Planet say that Eli Manning sucks! He just won the freakin' Super Bowl and willed his team to 6 straight wins (and like 9 on the road). What the fuck does that say about Croyle? |
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MY truth. Charles may end up being the key to this draft. In two years. |
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Offensive Line, along with Receiver and QB, seems to be a position that takes guys a couple of years to develop. I'm guessing there are more successful mid to late round picks starting on OL than any other position in the league.
Point being that the staff may think that some of the young guys, like Taylor, may develop into a solid start, which would explain why they didn't draft more than two linemen. Granted, I don't know what they would have done if a 3rd/4th round talent like Richardson hadn't been there in the 6th, but he was and they nabbed a 2nd linemen with potential. Clearly, too, they thought that TE was a bigtime position of need or they wouldn't have drafted two of them. |
Here's wishing you guys the best this season. May the 2007 NFL Draft turn out to be the very best for Kansas City. Nobody can write and analize your team better than you do. I truly mean that. ...
Now to my pet peeve -- Sports Journalism 101 I am specifically addressing my concern on the part of sports writers that veer away from their role as journalists to do something immoral -- predict the news. With the explosion of the Internet, we're dealing with very different sports outlets. False information is passed from blog to blog. Predictions seem to be the norm. Sports is not a difficult place to work, except for people afraid of being left behind. Instead of gathering the news, discussing the news, interpreting the news, reporting the news, they're predicting the news. It's worthless. They're nothing more than fortune tellers. While their errors may be amusing, false conclusions are not. That's much harder to fix. However, it's common knowledge that mock drafts sell. Whenever you click on a Web site, advertisers take notice. It may be fun, and a few fortune tellers may be right or lucky on individual players, but until the game is played, and until the very end of the season, nobody can write the story. I'm not here to offend -- My story applies to sports journalists that fall into the trap of predictions. Not to the entertainers and ex-NFL players that appear on sports networks daily. They're in a worthless class all by themselves. |
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