c_hawkbob wrote:I think a draft day trade is still a very real possibility.
I don't care about why, I'm more about whether or not.
There's still a month before the draft and anything can happen in the next few weeks.
I doubt anything happens, but one never knows with either trades or ability to finalize an extension.
Seahawks4Ever wrote:The only reason ET wrote that article about how he wants to "retire" as a Seahawk because the Cowboys are not coming to get him and he doesn't want to end up being traded to Cleveland or some place worse, so, that's why Seattle isn't looking as bad to ET as it did during the season...But, hey, I hope ET DOES play his entire career here, he is the best SS we ever had. I don't compare ET to Easley because they played different positions. Now, you could compare Easley to Kam and I would pick Kenny all day long. Easley was the "intimidator" of football LOL
Zorn76 wrote:Had we been making better early draft choices over the last few years, I'd be more enthusiastic for trading ET. But given the changes already on that side of the ball, in addition to the fact that we've whiffed Badly several times early in April or May, it makes sense that we'd try to keep him.
Aseahawkfan wrote:John and Pete have been drafting poorly since 2013. They knocked it out the park the first few years, then crapped the bed for the most part after that. I think Frank Clark is our best pick since that draft with some promise from Tyler Lockett. Justin Britt has become a serviceable center. For the most part it's been miss after miss after miss. I hope they stop reaching for high end athletic talent and pick some guys that can play.
HumanCockroach wrote:Nah, Carroll didn't have intimate knowledge of a slew of those players that made that SB team. You're stretching there.... he knew the types of players for his system, but thinking he had inside info on guys like Irvin, Wilson, Earl, Kam, Maxwell, Wright, Bennett, Avril, Okung, Unger, Giacomini etc seems pretty thin to me... sure Sherman ( though Carroll recruited him as a receiver, and his career at Stanford at corner was pretty ho hum, hence 5th round) Baldwin who he was so high on, he didn't bother drafting, even maybe Wagner ( though I'm not entirely sure Caroll recruited or even did work on him at SC). Ultimately, that team was stockpiled with players Carroll didn't have intimate knowledge on, same as now.
mykc14 wrote:Am I the only one who still has high hopes for last year's draft class? Give them a little more time and it could turn out to be very good. Griffin, Pocic, Naz Jones, and Chris Carson all seem like they have a chance to contribute in a big way. Delano Hill, Tedrick Thompson and Amara Darboh all seem like they might have a chance to help out as well. Obviously I'm not holding my breath for McDowell, but if he somehow came back that would make a very interesting group.
mykc14 wrote:Am I the only one who still has high hopes for last year's draft class? Give them a little more time and it could turn out to be very good. Griffin, Pocic, Naz Jones, and Chris Carson all seem like they have a chance to contribute in a big way. Delano Hill, Tedrick Thompson and Amara Darboh all seem like they might have a chance to help out as well. Obviously I'm not holding my breath for McDowell, but if he somehow came back that would make a very interesting group.
NorthHawk wrote:Pocic is a natural Center if you look at the College game film, but he may be better elsewhere at the NFL level.
The coaching staff have to find his position early and let him learn the craft. This moving around stuff doesn't work with many younger OL players who need time to learn.
Ifedi is a good example of this. He never got a chance to fully learn how to play G and then was shuffled to RT where he's now learning how to play there. Now people are saying get rid of him.
It's lunacy to think someone who has the athletic and competitive traits a team wants but wasn't trained properly at the College level could learn 2 positions in 2 years and should therefor be let go as some are suggesting.
RiverDog wrote:
Agreed, but it does beg the question: Why did we draft a center with a 2nd round pick if we signed Britt through 2020?
RiverDog wrote:And I have a theory as to why they've stumbled since those first couple of years: The first two years, Pete had some very intimate knowledge of players in the college game that he was able to use to his advantage when he first took over, but the further away he gets from his USC days, the worse our player evaluation has become.
We've also had this habit of trading away high draft choices for players like Clipboard Jesus, Percy Harvin, Jimmy Graham, Sheldon Richardson, and Jerome Brown. As a consequence, we seem to trade down a lot in order to reclaim the numbers we've traded away, albeit it lower on the food chain, and might be missing out on better personnel in order to aquire more but lower picks.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
I think the reasons are varied:
1. Too much emphasis on player athleticism and physical measurables rather than their ability to play football. They have become too enamored of numbers. This caused them to reach on certain picks based on their numbers trying to hit a homerun rather than pick up some solid players.
2. Not having higher round picks because they traded them away for risky established players that didn't work out. Lower picks always have a lower chance of success, but their early success in the lower rounds made them overconfident.
3. Bad talent analysis at key positions, specifically O-line. Cable was a very poor talent analyst. It showed in pick after pick after pick. He seemed to look more for mental criteria rather than physical and technique criteria. That didn't work very well for us. Even the guy he picked from his old team (Robert Gallery) played like crap and didn't last. Pete held on to Cable too long whose success came from having the most brutal RB in the league and the smartest running QB.
These factors have come back to haunt them now as none of the players they signed other than Avril and Lynch worked out very well. They made those modest draft capital and monetary investments early.
NorthHawk wrote:They selected a lot of "hedge" players at Tackle.
By that I mean players that could play inside if T didn't work out. Most teams value that so it's not uncommon.
That's fine for one or two drafts, but I doubt a line can be consistent when you end up with a group full of Guards and are constantly switching them around.
My hope is Solari will find positions for the younger players and let them develop in a single spot as it takes a few years for an OLineman to really show what he can do.
It used to take less time, but there is not very good training at the College level in preparing OL for the NFL these days except for a few programs.
NorthHawk wrote:If there was any option on the table for the Cowboys to trade for him, the chances just increased as they cut Dez Bryant.
This saves them about $8.5 MM on the cap according to Spotrac.
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