abersonc said:
But I think what you are missing is that the entire concept of BPA is based on the idea that teams can clearly make ranking decisions between players -- the truth is that when you hit 18 to 20 or so that so many players are rated similarly that you can't just pick one and say "best player" -- well you could, but it would be naive. if say you have one player ranked an 80 and one an 81 why take the 81 if he is not going to be able to play when the 80 would? the difference between those rankings is so tiny that it doesn't make sense to adhere to the BPA concept in that case. now if you've got one guy who is a 90 and another who is an 80, of course you have to go BPA.
In one of the examples you give, you are essentially saying that both players (80 & 81) are equal in ability, so you choose the need player over the "best player available. In your other example you are saying one player is truly better than the other by a significant margin, so you choose the best player available.
I think what you are saying is that reaching for a player is ok, so long as it is just a little bit of a reach. Practically speaking, most teams will reach, based upon need, at least to a degree. The better teams don't reach nearly as high, or as often on average as the bad teams do.
It would be absurd to say that if the best players on our board were quarterbacks that we would take seven quarterbacks in the draft, if they were available when we draft. But, ideally, you take the player you need at the value he is worth. Don't reach for picks.
I really advocate taking the best player available, or trading out of the spot. Reaching is not a good option.
Lets look at this subject a different way. Lets say you
really need a defensive end badly (like we did for years) and the best player available isn't a defensive end. You can attempt to trade down if the BPA available isn't a defensive end, pick the best player available, or reach for the defensive end. If you choose the BPA you arguably won't be filling the defensive end position that you desperately need to fill, but will acquire a good player with that pick. If you reach, you probably will end up wasting that draft pick and get a subpar player that gets you no where (Kavika Pittman, Shante Carver, et. al.)