Don't you agree that it's a little early to declare the drafting of John Brown a success--is the process involved any more different than what lead to drafting Rob Housler with the 69th overall pick in the NFL draft? I think we should at least let Brown play a few downs of real football and separate himself from Steven Williams before we declare that everything went right there.
I agree that Whis's inability to acquire a quarterback was a real problem, but I don't know how you can say that he had too much of a voice in the draft room. It's rare that a head coach has the time or inclination to dig in an scout 4-7th round picks. They'll maybe get a dossier on the selected candidates toward the end of the process, but they don't really have the time or experience to move through the 2000+ prospects to get to the last 75-100 players on the draft board.
Do Ryan "He Never Fumbled in College" Williams, Andre Roberts, and Rob Housler really strike you as Ken Whisenhunt kind of prospects? Really? Meanwhile, Dan Williams, Patrick Peterson, Daryl Washington, and Michael Floyd are the picks that Whis likely had a ton of input on, because of the smaller pool of prospects to review and rank, and the relative value of those particular picks.
I think that Arians is probably better at articulating what he is looking for in a prospect than Whisenhunt could--in part, I think that's the difference between Whis's "engineering" approach and Arian's more sales-y personality. I think that Keim has become more accommodating of coach's evaluations of players, and the profile that the team is looking for.
This is largely speculative, because the top picks from this new organization haven't played yet, and there was little disagreement over Tyrann Mathieu's quality as a prospect discounting off-the-field questions. Until this staff starts hitting at least doubles with its top picks and settles on a rush linebacker and/or QB prospect that they can push their chips in on, I'm going to wait and see.
-I agree Brown is a wait and see regarding his success as a pro player. My point was that Keim delivered Arians the type of player that Arians has shown he needs. If Brown fails, then it shows Keim failed in being able to find an appropriate player to fill the void Arians needed filled.
-It was my understanding that Whis received final say on player acquisitions when his contract was extended. That would mean he would have final say on draft picks and some of them have Whis all over them IMO. As it has been discussed, there isn't a huge discrepency when it comes to player grades. We are talking about a .1 or .3 here or there. Our drafts looked to me like a head coach prefering sexy over structure.
-So, yes, Ryan Williams, Andre Roberts and Rob Houlser do have Whis all over them IMO. Offensive skill position choices over larger needs along the offensive line scream a head coach is making the choice over the GM because the head coach is maintaining he can get around the offensive line issues. In fact, the overall amount of offensive skill players drafted at the top of drafts during Whis tenure really looks to me of a guy trying to find the the parts to make his offense work rather than a GM working with his coach to manage short term needs with long term gains.
-It is all very speculative, I agree with that. And, I agree that the front office has to be able to hit on a premium position before I will be willing to state that they have turned the corner.
I am having a difficult time putting this into words, but I will try. I look at our team and the person with the most success is Bruce Arians and his ability to put together a viable offense. From what I have seen in Indy, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Indy again and Arizona, there looks to be a scheme and philosophy that works. I trust that, and I trust it more than I trust Keim's previous draft history. Because of that, the more Keim gets Arians pieces to make his offense work in an offensive league, the more confident I am. A QB makes a big difference, but if Arians can make Palmer work, I think we have some wiggle room. The more efficient Keim is at this, the more resources he can use to add talent to the defense which will lead to long term success IMO.
Hopefully that makes sense.