Seahawkfan80
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Spin Doctor":2d0td5pt said:The draft is a crapshoot, but the Seahawks are exceptionally bad in the first round, I don’t get why you guys are refuting that. There have been a lot of rookies taken in the first round near our original drafting spots in the last few years that are some of the best in the business at the moment. These players also happened to be at a position of need as well. There is no denying that the Seahawks have consistently been bad at first round drafting. Even our trades have not been very good. Percy Harvin, and Graham were duds.Seahawkfan80":2d0td5pt said:Mad Dog":2d0td5pt said:Spin Doctor":2d0td5pt said:The answer is that the FO doesn't do that. They just have a different grading scale than most other teams. I believe Fade pointed out what they look for, and what their approach is. They draft based on need. It is exactly why we took Penny the year before, and McDowell before that. In this draft there was a huge run on DE's and the Seahawks pegged that as their top priority (rightfully so). I personally don't think that Collier was their second, or perhaps even third choice. He just happened to be what was available at the moment. They traded down because Collier was graded as a second round prospect in their books.
Personally I really think they needed to go Savage here. He was the best player available at that spot, and he played a position that was arguably our second biggest need. Our safety position was one held together by bubble gum and duct tape. Quite frankly I was a little shocked when he wasn't the choice there. They ultimately went with what they deemed to be the biggest position of need.
That is how we ended up with Penny as well. Pete wanted to establish a running game and identified RB as the biggest priority. Carson played well but he had a big history of injuries, plus a particularly bad injury that year. Penny was identified as the one due a combination of his high SPARQ scores and durability. I think the reason why they decided against the likes of Chubs and Michel was due to injury concerns. They wanted a "sure thing" after the McDowell fiasco.
Carroll and company seem to believe that they can coach just about anyone up as well. Take them and mold them to their liking. There seems to be an emphasis on SPARQ numbers and just overall athleticism in many cases. They are great at finding guys late in the draft, but their early drafting is just about as horrid as I've seen. Some of the worst first round drafting in the business.
Carroll and company seem to favor volume above all else. They absolutely love those late round picks.
Is it really that horrid given where they've been drafting in the first round in the last 6 years? No top fifteen picks in ages.
We seem to view the lower first round as opportunity to garner more picks rather than a chance to get a great player. WE've been goos at getting more picks and that's produced some good results.
But I would have to see the outcomes of every teams first round picks to establish that we are terrible. Seems outside of the top 15 lots of players flame out.
I agree with this last statement. There are a lot of first rounders that dont make it on their team. Didnt we get 4 first rounders from other teams that did not excel enough to stay or be starters on their team? They being first rounders from 5 to 9 years ago?
Great post.
It is a crapshoot plus. I believe they are also looking at what they are gonna be looking at in the future for the players that are taken in the first round. Money is not a biggy, but the amount of time to get that person up to speed in the playing atmosphere. Britt was put in 3 positions to possibly learn his starting job as Center. I think it was a learning curve they were expecting. The future draft picks...are they gonna have the 2 years to acclimate to the game, or are they gonna be thrown into the fire day one and bust? I think they are holding off on slamming these guys in the fire so they have a chance to acclimate to the speed of the game. Practice is one thing, actual play time on the field with experience personnel is something totally different. Especially if there is a different team with their different coach and coaching philosophy. Teams will scheme for the opponent in some cases and change and adapt to different situations. I think that is where we see the metal of the coaching. Rookies will not be able to adapt as quickly if they have not been in that situation away from training camp.