You must be registered for see images
All eyes still on No. 5, best players available
Seth Polansky
azcardinals.com
azcardinals.com
It doesn’t matter what the four teams ahead of Arizona are going to do when the 2007 NFL Draft starts, and there aren’t any offers on the table right now for a trade up or down. The Cardinals will be ready to pick at No. 5 when it is their turn. That was part of what head coach Ken Whisenhunt and VP of Football Operations Rod Graves talked about during their pre-draft press conference.
“We’re focused on making the selection at No. 5,” Graves said. “But on Draft Day you have to wait and see how things unfold. And you certainly have to have someone interested in coming up. It would have to be an attractive enough of a situation to where we would want to consider that. As of right now none of that has happened. We can speculate all we want about whether or not the phone call comes to us or what we would do. So we’re focused on the fifth pick right now.”
It also doesn’t mean a trade won’t be made. It just has to be the right offer and the right situation.
Who can be taken with pick No. 5 is still up in the air. Any number of top prospects could land to the team in that slot. There are a handful of guys that could hear their name called. It’s all about which player is the best fit for this organization.
And that includes players who are considered “a reach” that high in the first round. The best player available for this team is the best player available period. If the administration feels a guy is worthy of the No. 5 pick, then he is. He might not be for another team. It’s all about the system and schemes to be run and how someone meshes with it.
“I will say that whatever selection we make at No. 5 we will not consider a reach by our evaluations,” Graves mentioned. “We will believe that it’s the best pick for us and the right pick for our football team. We want to say a year from now or two years from now if those guys are lining up and playing and benefiting your football team, nobody cares whether you selected exactly where the prognosticators thought they should have gone or not. And there are a number of players that fit that.”
Just because there are tons of permutations regarding the first four picks, Graves mentioned they involve most of the same guys. After their mock draft sessions, the Cardinals will have a good idea of who will be available when the time comes. And with the draft being so top-heavy with talent there won’t be any scrambling when it comes to deciding on the pick. The only thing that will take time is whether or not another team makes that call to trade up into the fifth position.
“I think when the time comes there won’t particularly be one player that we’re really excited about … there will be a number of players,” said Whisenhunt. “We feel like we’ve done our homework on them; we’ve gone through a number of different scenarios about what could potentially happen. So we feel good about the player that’s there. And hopefully we’ll have options.”
As the draft goes on Graves said it is important to continue with the right philosophy or risk getting too cute and missing an opportunity to secure the services of a very talented player. Whisenhunt really likes the fact that free agency took care of plenty of depth needs, which allows the draft process to be flexible when it comes to the best player available that fits this system.
“You don’t pick specifically for a certain position,” Whisenhunt offered. “If there’s a very good running back, or if there’s a very good whatever position available when you pick that you feel is a good fit for your organization, then you make that pick. Because ultimately success in this league comes down to competition at your position. And if you have that, you can foster an environment of guys raising their game to another level. And to me that’s what is important. We’re looking for a good player that can come in here and compete for a spot.”
There will be 120 names to choose from on the Cards’ board come Draft Weekend. Those are the top 120 guys that will fit the system in place. There is a chance all 120 could be gone by the time the seventh round is finished. In that case, everyone in the draft room goes back to the big board and starts to look at the rest of the guys that are the best at their positions. It’s still best player available … by system need.
The magic number for rookies could be 18-20. That is the amount of draft picks combined with undrafted rookie free agents brought into the fold. Whisenhunt mentioned that a couple more veteran free agents may be signed in the coming weeks, giving the team a large amount of players to evaluate. It’s always easier to cut down the numbers as training camp comes around than it is to go scrambling for someone to fill a position.
There have been a rash of stories this spring about leaked medical and drug testing reports, as well as the insinuations that coaches were putting up smoke screens all over the place in order to better acquire a player they covet. But none of that influences Graves and his staff. All information gathered and is reliable because it comes from sources he trusts.
“We feel very good about our process,” Graves added. “We’re focused entirely in-house on the information and evaluations. We line them up irrespective of all the speculation that flies out. What you don’t want to do is lose focus and start trying to match your information against what others outside of this organization think.
“We always go through the process of evaluating character and medical information that we’ve received from Indianapolis,” Graves went on to say. “There are always players that we would not pick or select, or sign as post-draft free agents, because of concerns we have about those players. Our process is no different than it’s always been. This is as much about risk management as it is about evaluating the talent of the players.”
No player is drafted in the hopes he will become something in the future. Coming in and competing from Day 1 is what Whisenhunt looks for. He will make that clear for the top pick, a late-round flier or an undrafted player. Whisenhunt wants to be precise in his explanations of what he expects because it will give the player a better chance to be an integral part of the club. That’s how Whisenhunt made the Falcons as a 12th-round draft pick in 1985 and that’s how anyone from this year’s crop is going to become a Cardinal.
“If come in here and work, you’re going to have a chance to compete for a position because that makes us all better,” Whisenhunt added.
While fans sit back and wait for the draft to begin, Graves, Whisenhunt and the team’s personnel and assistant coaches are going to be busy moving names up and down the draft board. A few hundred college players have been looked at over the course of the last season, 120 of them make the list and right now six will have the privilege of getting drafted to the Cardinals. There shouldn’t be any surprises by the picks. Plenty of homework was done to make sure of that.
Last edited: