McKDaddy
Well-Known Member
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The recent release of Maurice Hurst and the Pet Cat thread got me thinking about just how many recent draft picks have failed to meet the "concensus" value assigned by pre draft rankings.
Excluding QB's here are some that you probably remember from discussions on this board.
Vernon Hargreaves
Sheldon Rankins
Corey Coleman
Josh Doctson
Maurice Hurst
Robert Nkemdiche
Solomon Thomas
John Ross
Malik Hooker
Gareon Conley
Charles Harris
Reuben Foster
Taven Bryan
Mike Hughes
Clelin Ferrell
Rashan Gary
Andre Dillard
I have to admit I thought some of these would be better than they have shown thus far.
My takeaways are:
1) Failure to acknowledge "risk" is the prime ingredient for disaster
2) Level of competition matters. Not just the school or the conference but who did the player match up against.
3) Projecting a player to improve is dangerous. (And if it happens, often takes time)
4) Projecting a player to improve significantly is a mistake. (correct fundamental flaws, etc.)
5) Only allow measurables to influence your grade by a small %.
6) Good attitude\strong desire to be good will offset some lack of physical talent.
7) Poor attitude\not wanting to be good will erase immense physical talent.
8) Remember Parcell's QB rules. The principles will help you stay balanced in your evaluation of all positions.
Finalize your boards & hope the Cowboys get their evaluations correct!
Excluding QB's here are some that you probably remember from discussions on this board.
Vernon Hargreaves
Sheldon Rankins
Corey Coleman
Josh Doctson
Maurice Hurst
Robert Nkemdiche
Solomon Thomas
John Ross
Malik Hooker
Gareon Conley
Charles Harris
Reuben Foster
Taven Bryan
Mike Hughes
Clelin Ferrell
Rashan Gary
Andre Dillard
I have to admit I thought some of these would be better than they have shown thus far.
My takeaways are:
1) Failure to acknowledge "risk" is the prime ingredient for disaster
2) Level of competition matters. Not just the school or the conference but who did the player match up against.
3) Projecting a player to improve is dangerous. (And if it happens, often takes time)
4) Projecting a player to improve significantly is a mistake. (correct fundamental flaws, etc.)
5) Only allow measurables to influence your grade by a small %.
6) Good attitude\strong desire to be good will offset some lack of physical talent.
7) Poor attitude\not wanting to be good will erase immense physical talent.
8) Remember Parcell's QB rules. The principles will help you stay balanced in your evaluation of all positions.
Finalize your boards & hope the Cowboys get their evaluations correct!