Harry
ASFN Consultant and Senior Writer
I keep seeing this pop up on boards as the mantra for many teams. The Cards claim its their philosophy. Let’s work with the Cards as our example. First comes defining BPA. Is it the best athlete? Since most positions require specific skills how do you decide which skills contribute to “best.” They do the 40 yd dash at the combine, but O-linemen never win and yet they often go in round 1. Have you watched all the receivers who can’t bench press? Is college productivity the standard? Also what role does attitiude and coachability play.
It’s not that the concept of BPA is ignored, but in the era of a cap team’s can’t ignore need. Was Humphries the BPA? Nkemdiche may have been the best athlete but his college productivity wouldn’t class him as the BPA. I think a modified BPA is a more accurate view. My experience is teams never ignore need. What they consider is among our needs, who is the top BPA? Some teams will ask how that player compares to the overall BPA, but more often than not they fill the need. Now after round 2, BPA becomes more important because it’s harder to find guys you’re certain can solve a need, so you have to be more flexible. Specialists like kickers & returners are still often drafted by need. Oddly the Cards are weird in this aspect. It’s hard to call Chad Williams the BPA. How about Brandon Williams the year before?
I know you can find some teams that emphasize BPA more. You might call Baker a BPA, but the Cards had lost both starting safeties and looking down the road he sure appeared to be a TM replacement. So you often have to look ahead a year on the likely roster to ID the need. I know people are criticizing mocks based on need, but try listing the players by BPA. McShay has a top 50 or so list. Rob Rang does one for CBS. Compare one of those to the actual drafts. My experience is that some need-based mocks turn out to be closer to the actual draft. I also guarantee you that if you put 10 scouts in a room and told them to do 50 BPA lists, they’d be radically different after the top 7. It’s a nice thing to say BPA, but it’s not reality. Sure there are BPA picks, but there are just as many need picks in the first couple of rounds.
It’s not that the concept of BPA is ignored, but in the era of a cap team’s can’t ignore need. Was Humphries the BPA? Nkemdiche may have been the best athlete but his college productivity wouldn’t class him as the BPA. I think a modified BPA is a more accurate view. My experience is teams never ignore need. What they consider is among our needs, who is the top BPA? Some teams will ask how that player compares to the overall BPA, but more often than not they fill the need. Now after round 2, BPA becomes more important because it’s harder to find guys you’re certain can solve a need, so you have to be more flexible. Specialists like kickers & returners are still often drafted by need. Oddly the Cards are weird in this aspect. It’s hard to call Chad Williams the BPA. How about Brandon Williams the year before?
I know you can find some teams that emphasize BPA more. You might call Baker a BPA, but the Cards had lost both starting safeties and looking down the road he sure appeared to be a TM replacement. So you often have to look ahead a year on the likely roster to ID the need. I know people are criticizing mocks based on need, but try listing the players by BPA. McShay has a top 50 or so list. Rob Rang does one for CBS. Compare one of those to the actual drafts. My experience is that some need-based mocks turn out to be closer to the actual draft. I also guarantee you that if you put 10 scouts in a room and told them to do 50 BPA lists, they’d be radically different after the top 7. It’s a nice thing to say BPA, but it’s not reality. Sure there are BPA picks, but there are just as many need picks in the first couple of rounds.