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Either you're too stubborn to agree or just flat out clueless. But that's okay.
Probably both!
Either you're too stubborn to agree or just flat out clueless. But that's okay.
You're right. I don't understand how anyone can confuse two distinct approaches with evident different emphasis and claim they're the same.
94 and 95 are close enough to go either way.
I beleive in BPA
I also think that the talent differential is greatest at the top of the draft, and then as you get deeper into the draft, there are typically groups of players all with similar ratings to chose from at each draft spot.
Seriously: by the 2nd round, does anyone think scouting is so precise that the 40th ranked player is materially better than the 44th ranked player? How about the 70th vs the 75th? I don't think it is.
The CB every time.
The BPA concept gets a bit tricky when you're comparing OT's to QB's to pass rushers to CB's etc.
I may consider a LT the BPA at #7, but - working with slightly different criteria - you might favor an edge-rushing DE or OLB.
Our decision to draft Levi over Peterson might, on face value, be considered a matter of reaching for need instead of drafting the BPA. I'd disagree. I don't think anyone felt that Levi was the better option than Peterson because we needed a LT. It was more a matter of feeling that Peterson was damaged goods and too much of an injury risk. I personally feel we got what we expected in Levi but made the wrong decision (for all the right reasons) on Peterson.
The Spurs.
Good luck against Arsenal over the weekend. Huge game.
Be sure to come over to the World Sports section. We talk BPL over there among other things.
Welcome btw.
This is how I feel. You draft for need and you get more busts and less talent.Balance BPA with need. Need should never supersede talent.
And that's where need outweighs BPA. OLB is obviously a bigger need vs a CB. So you would take that OLB over the CB, even though the CB is graded a little bit higher.
I'm not talking about reaching for a player. I would definitely take Dee Milliner over Geno Smith. But Milliner vs Jones? Milliner vs Warmack? No way.
f they are graded that close you take biggest need.Need AND BPA is the same exact thing as BPA AND need. Haha you obviously don't have a clue as to what I'm saying.
CB graded 95 vs OLB graded 94. Who would you pick?
Didn't straight BPA leave us with ANOTHER wide receiver in the Top 10 last year?
Need AND BPA is the same exact thing as BPA AND need. Haha you obviously don't have a clue as to what I'm saying.
CB graded 95 vs OLB graded 94. Who would you pick?
When grades are that close you're ultimately grasping at straws trying to say one guy is better than the other.
That's why I advocate grading players on a bit of a wider scale like A+, A, A-, B+ etc. That way you can group a set of guys together and then when your pick comes up you're choosing between a handful of basically equal talents and you can pick one that fits a need vs seeing a guy that's a 95 instead of a 94 because of something arbitrary.
This also leaves a bit more room for when you just have a good or bad "feeling" about a player. You aren't forced into taking a player that rubbed you the wrong way in an interview just because he's at the top of your board. You can look and see if there's a few other guys that are his "equal" available.
Has it occurred to anyone that you could draft for BPA on whiff 10 straight times or draft for need and bolo 10 straight times - or vice versa?
The Draft is an inexact science and bad luck or poor execution of any drafting strategy can render any strategy useless - or you could do the "pin the tail on the donkey", try to hit the proverbial dart board and hit a bullseye 10 of 10 times because you got lucky.
My point - We should choose the strategy that we think will work best, but in doing so, realize that it might only move the needle 5 - 10% in any direction. We're far too "certain" in arguing either case.
That's exactly why you go BPA in the draft. It's all a crap shoot so your best odds is to go with the most talented player.Has it occurred to anyone that you could draft for BPA and whiff 10 straight times or draft for need and bolo 10 straight times - or vice versa?
The Draft is an inexact science and bad luck or poor execution of any drafting strategy can render any strategy useless - or you could do the "pin the tail on the donkey", try to hit the proverbial dart board and hit a bullseye 10 of 10 times because you got lucky.
My point - We should choose the strategy that we think will work best, but in doing so, realize that it might only move the needle 5 - 10% in any direction. We're far too "certain" in arguing either case.
Obviously you would rate they players who would work in your scheme.The bottom line is that it isn't cut and dry like some of you guys are making it sound. It is a terrible idea to draft on BPA without at least factoring in NEED to some extent. And you can't just draft on need and completely ignore BPA. They have to work together to get you the best possible pick for your team. Another thing to keep in mind is how the player fits in your scheme. For instance if your team has a 3-4 defense and the two best players on the board are a 4-3 DE and a 3-4 OLB and the 4-3 guy is rated say A+ and the 3-4 guy is rated an A we are going to go with the 3-4 guy regardless because the 4-3 guy doesn't fit our system.
When grades are that close you're ultimately grasping at straws trying to say one guy is better than the other.
That's why I advocate grading players on a bit of a wider scale like A+, A, A-, B+ etc. That way you can group a set of guys together and then when your pick comes up you're choosing between a handful of basically equal talents and you can pick one that fits a need vs seeing a guy that's a 95 instead of a 94 because of something arbitrary.
This also leaves a bit more room for when you just have a good or bad "feeling" about a player. You aren't forced into taking a player that rubbed you the wrong way in an interview just because he's at the top of your board. You can look and see if there's a few other guys that are his "equal" available.
That's how I would do it. Group all equally talented players together so its a pretty easy choice when its your pick. If you like several still available you could trade back some.
When grades are that close you're ultimately grasping at straws trying to say one guy is better than the other.
That's why I advocate grading players on a bit of a wider scale like A+, A, A-, B+ etc. That way you can group a set of guys together and then when your pick comes up you're choosing between a handful of basically equal talents and you can pick one that fits a need vs seeing a guy that's a 95 instead of a 94 because of something arbitrary.
This also leaves a bit more room for when you just have a good or bad "feeling" about a player. You aren't forced into taking a player that rubbed you the wrong way in an interview just because he's at the top of your board. You can look and see if there's a few other guys that are his "equal" available.
f they are graded that close you take biggest need.