2. Every team drafts guys who end up doing hardly anything or sucking. Even high. You could go through every team and list a series of 1st through 3rd round picks that didn't meet expectations. Even the most respected drafters like the Ravens. I wonder how they feel about Kindle and Terrence "Moobs" Cody right now? Is it on the coach? Sure. Our previous coach drafted JJ Arrington in the 2nd. Daryl Blackstock and Leonard Pope in the 3rd. Go back to the McGinnis years it gets even worse. Missing on draft picks sucks. But it happens all too often in the NFL. Better to have a coach that moves on than one who tries in vein to make a career where there isn't one.
Every team? Go find me five good teams who have had 2nd and 3rd round picks that never played a down for the team before being released. Find them. Show me.
The Ravens knew that they weren't going to get much out of Kindle this season when they drafted him. Terrance Cody is injured. Do you expect either of those players
to not make Baltimore's roster next season? I sure don't. So those picks are already better than Cody Brown was.
What do I care whether or not Whis drafts better than Green? I want this team to draft as well as the Colts do. Or the Pats. The fact remains that five years into Whis's tenure this team is still thin to the point that we have two undrafted free agent rookies starting or getting major playing time, combined with a handful of very old veterans. That's on the coaching staff and front office.
J.J. Arrington was good his last season here. We wouldn't have made it to the Super Bowl without him. Leonard Pope is starting for the Chiefs. Daryl Blackstock had 20 tackles and started 4 games for the Bengals last season. It's not like these guys haven't had careers after the left the Cards; it's that the Cards--this coaching staff--failed to develop their talents.
3. I agree those FA signings sucked. At least we got more out of them than Oliver Ross and that center we signed under Green who's name escapes me. I don't know enough about other teams to know how they've done in this department though.
Well then maybe you should go an excuse the whiffs that the Cards have made in free agency and the ten million dollars that they've wasted.
But going back to the draft, I've looked through other teams and most of them don't even have a long term hit rate of 50%. So in that light let's look at Whiz's drafts.
2007:
Levi Brown, Alan Branch, Buster Davis, Steve Breaston, Ben Patrick.
We'll give this draft a 2/5. Got a starting WR in Breaston and a solid TE in Patrick and 3 underperformers/busts.
2008:
DRC, Campbell, Doucet, Iwebema, THT, Chris Harrington, Brandon Keith.
This draft is AT least a 3/7 with DRC, Campbell and THT, but I'd count Iwebema as a solid rotational player. Wish I could count Keith but he's been such a disappointment so far.
So now Whiz is 6/12
2009: Still a bit premature to judge this but I'll try.
Beanie, Cody Brown, Rashad Johnson, Toler, Herman Johnson, Will Davis, LS, Trevor Canfield.
I count Beanie, Toler and LSH as hits already. Brown and Canfield are obvious misses. The jury is still out on the others but I'm more inclined to make them misses.
So Whiz is 9/20 going into this years draft class in my mind. Not great but not terrible either. I challenge you to go through other teams over the past 5 years and find many that have a higher hit rate?
It's difficult to compare this way using good front offices, because good front offices don't turn over players at the rate that the Cards have once Whis took over--especially this last offseason.
Look at the Colts. In the last five years they've drafted and developed Joseph Addai (1st), Freddie Keiaho (3rd), Antoine Bethea (6th), Clint Session (4th), Mike Pollack (2nd), Phillip Wheeler (3rd), Pierre Garcon (6th), and Austin Collie (4th). Because their front office is so efficient, they NEVER sign free agents, so they never bust on them.
Since 2006 the Ravens have developed Haloti Ngata (1st), Ben Gruggs (1st), Marshall Yanda (3rd), LaRon McClain (4th), Antwan Barnes (4th), Joe Flacco (1st), Ray Rice (2nd), Tom Zbikowski (3rd), and Michael Oher (1st).
This isn't just about drafting well. The Cards have done a good job of drafting offensive players the past five years. But defensively? They've been stinktacular. And now we're depending on the defense to win games for us while the offense reloads and changes focus. It's difficult to do that when of the 10 defensive players the coaching staff has brought in, three are off the roster (without ever showing what they could do in games that count), three are rotational players (Davis, Branch, and Iwebema), and one is a guy who made his first play in his 20th NFL game (Rashard Johnson).
How can we trust this front office and coaching staff to develop quality defensive starters when they've been so bad at picking and developing them so far? An underrated aspect of the Colts front office is that they've been so good at identifying and developing linebackers that they essentially replace 2/3rd of the linebacking corps every offseason when they leave in free agency.