kerouac9
Klowned by Keim
A lot of fans here and elsewhere were surprised when the Arizona Cardinals took Michael Floyd with the 13th pick in the 2012 NFL draft. Many here were hoping that the Cards would trade down and get additional picks if one of the elite prospects didn't fall to them at a position of need.
Instead, the Cards were faced with a great value player that few expected to be available at that point in the draft, and jumped at the opportunity rather reach for a prospect at a position of need (say, guard David DeCastro) or settle on a prospect who wasn't an ideal scheme fit (say, Melvin Ingram or Quentin Couples).
What that strategy earned them was a rising star and the Cardinals' most productive receiver in 2013.
There is a kind of underswell of enthusiasm for the Cards to trade down in this years draft, with the assumption that there aren't substantially better prospects available to the Cards at 20th overall than they'd be able to get with the 26th or 30th overall selections, while picking up an additional fourth or even third-round pick in the bargain. This argument isn't without merit, but I imagine that there are a handful of players whom the Cards would run to the podium to turn in their cards for, or would require really significant compensation to pass.
I'm not going to list Javedon Clowney and Sammy Watkins here, but these are the players that I think the Cards would be happy to take at 20th overall without feeling like they left value on the table:
1. Justin Gilbert, CB, Oklahoma State
2. Aaron Donald, DT, Pittsburgh
3. Teddy Bridgewater, QB, Louisville
4. Taylor Lewan, OT, Michigan
If those four guys are gone, I think the Cards start looking around and waiting for the phone to ring, and they'd take a good deal to trade out.
I think it's possible that two or even three of those prospects fall to the Cards. I also think that the Cards would seriously consider a trade out even if Calvin Pryor (S, Louisville) or Anthony Barr (OLB, UCLA) are available.
Instead, the Cards were faced with a great value player that few expected to be available at that point in the draft, and jumped at the opportunity rather reach for a prospect at a position of need (say, guard David DeCastro) or settle on a prospect who wasn't an ideal scheme fit (say, Melvin Ingram or Quentin Couples).
What that strategy earned them was a rising star and the Cardinals' most productive receiver in 2013.
There is a kind of underswell of enthusiasm for the Cards to trade down in this years draft, with the assumption that there aren't substantially better prospects available to the Cards at 20th overall than they'd be able to get with the 26th or 30th overall selections, while picking up an additional fourth or even third-round pick in the bargain. This argument isn't without merit, but I imagine that there are a handful of players whom the Cards would run to the podium to turn in their cards for, or would require really significant compensation to pass.
I'm not going to list Javedon Clowney and Sammy Watkins here, but these are the players that I think the Cards would be happy to take at 20th overall without feeling like they left value on the table:
1. Justin Gilbert, CB, Oklahoma State
2. Aaron Donald, DT, Pittsburgh
3. Teddy Bridgewater, QB, Louisville
4. Taylor Lewan, OT, Michigan
If those four guys are gone, I think the Cards start looking around and waiting for the phone to ring, and they'd take a good deal to trade out.
I think it's possible that two or even three of those prospects fall to the Cards. I also think that the Cards would seriously consider a trade out even if Calvin Pryor (S, Louisville) or Anthony Barr (OLB, UCLA) are available.