kalibane wrote:Your point is meaningless unless you have a better use of that pick in mind. Thus my post. If it was such a poor use of that pick, what should they have done instead?
In a vacuum Irvin may not have lived up to what you expect in a first round pick. But we don't live in a vacuum. In the context of his draft class he actually may have been the best use of the #15 overall pick.
Bringing up Aaron Curry is a pure D distraction from the topic. Aaron Curry was a bust. And whether or not the 2009 draft was a bad draft there are a whole bunch of players who have proven to be FAR superior to Curry:
Andre Smith, Eugene Monroe, B.J. Raji, Michael Crabtree, Knowshon Moreno, Brian Orakpo, Brian Cushing, Jeremy Maclin. Even the guys who proved to be big dissapointments (Sanchez, Ayers, Malcom Jenkins, Heyward-Bey) are far superior players to Curry just by virtue of managing to stay in the league.
If you can't even play Monday Morning QB and come up with a clearly superior use of that pick with hindsight on your side, you have no point.
Here's a better use: trade back.
Face it, the Hawks have done better in the 3rd round and later than they have in the first 2 rounds.
The hawks should not have drafted ANYONE at #15. We should have acquired more picks.
They either overrated Irvin or they stubbornly refused to trade back with no one of value currently on the board.
Honestly though, the Irvin pick isn't bad enough to deserve a lot of criticism. He will never be a good DE so its a failure in that regard but he has at least earned what playing time at LB that he gets and that means something on a defense as good as ours. There have been plenty of mid 1st rounders who have done worse.
PS. With the new rookie wage scale, players like Irvin no longer hurt the team other than opportunity cost. If Irvin was making $6m then we'd have a reason to be mad. He isn't hurting the cap or the team right now.