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| Time to look at the draft |
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(April 2, 2004) -- It's "rumor" season for sure with the annual meetings
over and most attention will turn to the draft. It is the responsibility
of each and every club executive to find out what their draft position
is worth.
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Teams that say they don't ever make trades have that prerogative, but
they shouldn't stick their head in the sand and not entertain offers to
sell their spot to the highest bidder. With three weeks to go, there are
already 28 trades from old business that affect this draft, and there
will surely be more. The problem is rumors rule the airwaves and the
print media. It's time to throw around trade ideas, but it's not time to
pull the trigger on trades. It is time for teams to decide what they are
looking for in the draft. Can the draft satisfy those needs? How many
other teams have the same needs? Are their hidden gems that no one knows
like your team does and can you keep it a secret? Let's take a look at a
real issue that will very much affect this draft.
A number of teams are making a conversion from the 4-3 defense to the
3-4 scheme. Some teams are just installing a limited package as a
changeup, other teams are going for the overhaul. Granted, the Falcons
are abandoning the 3-4 for a penetrating 4-3, but a significant number
of teams are going the other way. In some ways, the teams making the
smaller change are more at risk than the teams going for the conversion.
Sure the success Bill Belichick has in New England became required video
study for the offseason, but there are a couple of key questions teams
have to ask and answer before they can pull this off.
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Does your team have a big, stout nose tackle that can eat up two
blockers on every single play? That is not the same player who can
line up in a 4-3 defense and penetrate an "A" gap or loop around an
offensive tackle in a three-man line stunt. The Patriots went and got
Ted Washington last year, and when they lost him this year, they
quickly grabbed Keith Traylor. The
Patriots like to have a seasoned veteran play the nose-tackle spot.
Remember the Ravens, Texans and Steelers are always looking for 3-4
parts, but now you add the Raiders, Cowboys, Jets and Chargers as
teams possibly looking to use some 3-4, and the draft will run out of
nose-tackle types quickly. That's good news for the big two-gap
players needed to set up the front. Look for Miami's (Fla.) Vince
Wilfork, Texas' Marcus Tubbs, Hawaii's Isaac Sopoaga, Oregon's Junior
Siavii and Texas Christian's Chad Pugh to go a bit higher than
expected because of the number of teams looking at the three-man front
defense.
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Does your team have that "tweener" player who can play defensive end
in a four-man front and just as quickly take his hand off the ground
and play outside linebacker? The Patriots get great mileage from
Willie McGinest in this area. Patriots opponents call him the
adjustment player. I'm not talking about someone like Karlos Dansby
from Auburn, who will be an excellent prospect as an outside
linebacker in the 3-4, but at 235 pounds, he's too light to be a true
defensive end. Candidates like Will Smith (Ohio State), Isaac Hilton
(Hampton), Uyi Osunde (Connecticut) and Roderick Green (Central
Missouri State) are a few that could be that kind of player.
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Does your team have four starting linebackers on the team or do they
have to head to the draft for one more? If so, this may be a bad year.
There are only about eight linebackers to figure into the top 100
picks in the draft and not all of them can play in a 3-4 scheme.
Remember, the inside linebackers have to be able to line up over the
offensive guards and be able to take on 300-pound blockers and shed
them. A 6-foot, 230-pound tackling machine like
Derrick Brooks would have some trouble if he had to play
opposite a guard like Larry Allen. So
who fits from this draft? Jonathan Vilma from Miami (Fla.) is a
terrific player but is much better suited to play behind a defensive
lineman in a four-man front. The Patriots have big linebackers like
Ted Johnson, Roman Phifer and
Tedy Bruschi who all play around 250 pounds. There are only four
legitimate first-day linebackers over 240 pounds.
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A 3-4 defensive end is more of a tackle than an end, especially on the
split-end side. Typically, a 3-4 defensive end lines up on the outside
shoulder of the offensive tackle. A 4-3 defensive tackle lines up over
the smaller offensive guards where his job is to penetrate into the
backfield. Teams studying the draft are looking for very large
defensive ends or tall, athletic defensive tackles. Teams that play
the 3-4 would rather pay the outside linebackers than the defensive
ends, so picking in the middle of the draft is a preference. College
defensive ends like Marquis Hill (LSU) fit the bill but he is one of
the only ends in the draft with the bulk to do it. Defensive tackles
like Randy Starks (Maryland) can do it but he'll be long gone before a
3-4 team will get to him. Deeper in the draft, Tommy Kelly
(Mississippi State), Tim Anderson (Ohio State) or Darrell Campbell
(Notre Dame) fit the profile.
 | | | Vince Wilfork has the size and skill to be a lane-clogging DT that teams hope for. | |
What was interesting to listen to at the annual meetings were the number
of coaches who feel the effect of the 3-4 package that created
advantages for defenses will be watered down as more and more offenses
get experience against it. Starting this year, teams could easily play
30-40 percent of their defensive plays against it and by October have an
excellent feel for how to handle it, and most importantly, not be taken
by surprise when a team came out in it. As one personnel man said,
"Without the element of surprise, it may not be as effective, and the
personnel we will have to get to run it effectively could make it a bad
idea."
Coaching the 3-4 package in conjunction with the 4-3 as an additional
package takes a special coach who can really teach the nuances and
believe in the value of two concepts. Not all of the teams considering
this have the experience in teaching both, running both and drafting for
both. As one GM said to me, "More than one staff will get in trouble
trying to pull this off, and we will make more draft mistakes trying to
set them up to do it."
I'm not sure of the failure rate of this experiment around the league,
but I am sure it will change opportunities for some draft-eligible
players. Be ready for a few surprise picks if your team has announced
they are looking at the 3-4 defense.
The Wonderlic score and the back end of the draft
I talked with one of the premier experts on the trends in the NFL. He
studies everything the NFL does over time and takes notions and turns
them into reliable facts, or he has them thrown out because they just
aren't true.
I asked him what the past few years of his research has taught him about
the value of the Wonderlic test. The test is used to measure the
intelligence of the incoming candidates to the NFL. He had a few
interesting comments. The test score doesn't carry the same weight at
his team anymore. Years ago, it was very important and it was used in
the decision process. He said there's a lot of evidence that the scores
aren't valid. The truth is low scores haven't been a great predictor of
a lack of success in the league. He quoted an NFL head coach he admires
who said that he never met anyone who didn't have the intelligence to
play pro football. It's an interesting comment that led me to ask if not
the intelligence test, then where? His quick response was to get the
assistant coaches to do a better job of coaching.
As for the back end of the draft, Rounds 5, 6, 7 and undrafted free
agents, another guy who studies the draft all year long for a club said,
"We work harder on the second day than the first because that's how you
beat the salary cap." His team expects the last three picks and two
undrafted players to make the team every year. During the first
offseason after these five make the roster, they shouldn't even count in
the salary cap since none of them make the top 51 salaries. I asked him
if he has the research done to back up which positions have the best
chance of making the team as undrafted players. He made me guess and I
said fullback, offensive guard, punter, kicker and safety. He said I was
close, very close. He also told me his team has two people assigned to
study the second day of the draft. They know very little about the top
half of the draft, but they know the second-day values really well and
can take over the draft on Sunday. That's a smart idea.
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