RE: 2022 NFL draft (Full Version)

All Forums >> [The Minnesota Vikings] >> Vikes Talk



Message


Phil Riewer -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:15:05 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

We should have gotten Detroit's 2nd and 3rd.

Was that deal available? Do you think Kwesi et al simply don't understand anything, but you do?


The deal should have been available to a good negotiator. Someone has to win. We obviously weren't willing to walk away if we didn't get thecright price. We got worked.


I read that Detroit offered the same deal to the pick behind us...so I would say it wasn't.




bohumm -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:15:24 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

We should have gotten Detroit's 2nd and 3rd.

Was that deal available? Do you think Kwesi et al simply don't understand anything, but you do?


The deal should have been available to a good negotiator. Someone has to win. We obviously weren't willing to walk away if we didn't get thecright price. We got worked.

How do you know this? It's incredible to me that you know not only what was available and who was great, but what hypothetical that didn't happen should have happened if only our GM was more of a dude...




Todd M -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:21:25 AM)

I don't know if I'd say it was incredible. <kicks stones> I mean I have a pretty good sense of things...




Murph -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:23:15 AM)

I like the player we drafted but loved a lot of players we passed on for crappy trade within the division.

I love what Detroit did last night, may have come away with the two best players in the draft.

We should had drafted Williams.




Todd M -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:24:22 AM)

You have to set the tone your 1st deal. I "sense" a lot of other teams squaring up Kwesi as a nice guy who will help you out taking less bc hecwants to play.




Murph -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:28:29 AM)

Couldn't they have drafted Cine at 34 or was he that hot of a 1st round prospect?




Bill Johanesen -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:37:31 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

It has been disappointing. I got excited for Harbough...didn't get him. J wanted to move on from Cousins...didn't. I dreampt of Hamilton falling and he did...we passed. And I will never be convinced it was a good trade. No matter how the players pan out. I'd be willing to bet no team has taken less to drop that far.

So, proof doesn't matter because your dreams and feelings trump all? It doesn't matter if you'd bet about the drop; what matters at this point is what happened and whether the value of the players we end up exceeds the value of picking someone at 12, or taking a different deal.

Kwesi took the deal that was available, passing on a couple of players a lot of us like, and he'll take players and/or make deals today, and in two or three years we'll have some answers, though maybe before. Everyone thinks they're smarter than Kwesi, and maybe they are, but you didn't get to make the decision and he had to make the decision. He had a process, made a decision, and now we'll see.

If you want to give up on him and the players the Vikings pick, go ahead. But many of you would be bitching no matter what was done, especially if there's some complexity to assessing the outcome.


And 46.




marty -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:37:45 AM)

So Cine is the 2nd best safety, but the 3rd one taken ? Is that because of the free safety and strong safety definitions ?




marty -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:39:23 AM)

I was correct about Pittsburgh taking QB Kenny Pickett, and I think he will be a good player.

It will be hard to make the pro bowl as a QB in the AFC, but I think he will do all right.




Murph -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:54:33 AM)

Players we could be targeting at 34?

Andrew Booth Jr., CB

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Booth is a sudden athlete with good body control and outstanding short-area burst. He's a scheme versatile corner who was asked to play a lot of coverages at Clemson and held up well across the board. He has playmaker instincts and attacks the ball like a receiver. He's a willing run defender who flies to the football. -- Steve Muench

Arnold Ebiketie, Edge

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Ebiketie has long arms and is a master at preventing offensive tackles from locking onto his pads as he advances his pass rush. He knows how to attack linemen and counters well when he doesn't win initially. Ebiketie has some issues anchoring when teams run at him, but he's relentless in pursuit. -- Steve Muench

Christian Watson, WR

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Watson is a big target with outstanding speed, longer arms and big hands. He's a threat to take the top off the coverage and is an instinctive open-field runner with good contact balance. Watson is a hands catcher with good body control and a wide catch radius. He's a smooth mover for his size and flashed as a route runner the week of the Senior Bowl. -- Steve Muench




bohumm -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 8:57:52 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

It has been disappointing. I got excited for Harbough...didn't get him. J wanted to move on from Cousins...didn't. I dreampt of Hamilton falling and he did...we passed. And I will never be convinced it was a good trade. No matter how the players pan out. I'd be willing to bet no team has taken less to drop that far.

So, proof doesn't matter because your dreams and feelings trump all? It doesn't matter if you'd bet about the drop; what matters at this point is what happened and whether the value of the players we end up exceeds the value of picking someone at 12, or taking a different deal.

Kwesi took the deal that was available, passing on a couple of players a lot of us like, and he'll take players and/or make deals today, and in two or three years we'll have some answers, though maybe before. Everyone thinks they're smarter than Kwesi, and maybe they are, but you didn't get to make the decision and he had to make the decision. He had a process, made a decision, and now we'll see.

If you want to give up on him and the players the Vikings pick, go ahead. But many of you would be bitching no matter what was done, especially if there's some complexity to assessing the outcome.


And 46.

Yes. It gets difficult, but part of the calculus is did we do something at 34 that we couldn't have done at 46, and, of course, at 66.




lyle chabot -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:02:58 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Murph

I like the player we drafted but loved a lot of players we passed on for crappy trade within the division.

I love what Detroit did last night, may have come away with the two best players in the draft.

We should had drafted Williams.

Bingo




lyle chabot -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:05:01 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Murph

Players we could be targeting at 34?

Andrew Booth Jr., CB

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Booth is a sudden athlete with good body control and outstanding short-area burst. He's a scheme versatile corner who was asked to play a lot of coverages at Clemson and held up well across the board. He has playmaker instincts and attacks the ball like a receiver. He's a willing run defender who flies to the football. -- Steve Muench

Arnold Ebiketie, Edge

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Ebiketie has long arms and is a master at preventing offensive tackles from locking onto his pads as he advances his pass rush. He knows how to attack linemen and counters well when he doesn't win initially. Ebiketie has some issues anchoring when teams run at him, but he's relentless in pursuit. -- Steve Muench

Christian Watson, WR

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Watson is a big target with outstanding speed, longer arms and big hands. He's a threat to take the top off the coverage and is an instinctive open-field runner with good contact balance. Watson is a hands catcher with good body control and a wide catch radius. He's a smooth mover for his size and flashed as a route runner the week of the Senior Bowl. -- Steve Muench

If we could get Booth and Watson today it will take a little of the bad taste away from last night




Bill Johanesen -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:06:50 AM)

People need to separate the actual and potential players from the trade itself. Step one in a trade is to get, as a minimum, equal return. Kwesi's squirrely chart needs to be shitcanned.




Brad H -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:07:12 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Phil Riewer

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

We should have gotten Detroit's 2nd and 3rd.


NFL.COM give the Lions an A- and the Vikes an A for the 1st round.

I don't know the kid but he was on the top defense....I guess I can't say the same for Hamilton but I would have loved Davis.

Not entirely sure how they can get a grade before seeing the rest of the picks in the trade. It's like grading a meal after seeing the appetizer. So far we passed up on a more high-profile pick to get a safety that some sights are saying could potentially turn into a mediocre starter. Not sure how that equates to an A. Perhaps we'll find out more in two picks, but so far I'd rate it somewhere closer to a D+/C- than an A.




TJSweens -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:07:30 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

It has been disappointing. I got excited for Harbough...didn't get him. J wanted to move on from Cousins...didn't. I dreampt of Hamilton falling and he did...we passed. And I will never be convinced it was a good trade. No matter how the players pan out. I'd be willing to bet no team has taken less to drop that far.

So, proof doesn't matter because your dreams and feelings trump all? It doesn't matter if you'd bet about the drop; what matters at this point is what happened and whether the value of the players we end up exceeds the value of picking someone at 12, or taking a different deal.

Kwesi took the deal that was available, passing on a couple of players a lot of us like, and he'll take players and/or make deals today, and in two or three years we'll have some answers, though maybe before. Everyone thinks they're smarter than Kwesi, and maybe they are, but you didn't get to make the decision and he had to make the decision. He had a process, made a decision, and now we'll see.

If you want to give up on him and the players the Vikings pick, go ahead. But many of you would be bitching no matter what was done, especially if there's some complexity to assessing the outcome.

I have read draft profiles that like Cine better than Hamilton. They say Cine is faster, plays faster and hits harder. I have also read that some sites seemed to penalize Cine because other members of the Georgia defense graded higher. I don't know which analysis is correct, but I hope Kwesi does. The Vikings said they had Cine rated in the 13-19 range. If you wanted Hamilton at 12 and we got someone even better at 32, that would be great. I guess we'll know a year from now.

What I do know is that we have the second pick today and the 2nd and 12th picks of the 3rd round. Today could be a really good day.




Tom Sykes -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:11:35 AM)

I’m intrigued by Cine … but it will take some luck for him to end up better than Hamilton.

After talking about the importance of first rd talent vs other rds, Kwesi sure jumped pretty hard to move in the direction of quantity over quality.

It smacks of somebody trying too hard to prove they deserve a spot at the table. The values of the trade are too close to call, why not just get good talent straight up at 12 or move down a little (like Spielman last year), pick up something extra and still get a solid first rd talent?

You don’t have to solve a complicated equation Kwes to prove your worth.

We’ll see how today goes … its very possible 34 could get us a prospect rated higher than our first (like cb Booth).

You never know, maybe we trade the extra third for a veteran and Kwesi proves himself to be diabolically clever.

Right now he just seems too smart for his own good.




Bill Johanesen -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:13:00 AM)

I would not be surprised if after the Lions took Williams that someone said "Uh, hey Kwesi. Now that you gave the keys to a division rival allowing them to draft a gamebreaker and there are no cornerbacks left to cover him, we might have to draft a safety."

Kwesi looks up, sees a bunch of grizzled football veterans staring at him, and leaves to get a chi kale mango tea.




TJSweens -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:22:06 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tom Sykes

I’m intrigued by Cine … but it will take some luck for him to end up better than Hamilton.

After talking about the importance of first rd talent vs other rds, Kwesi sure jumped pretty hard to move in the direction of quantity over quality.

It smacks of somebody trying too hard to prove they deserve a spot at the table. The values of the trade are too close to call, why not just get good talent straight up at 12 or move down a little (like Spielman last year), pick up something extra and still get a solid first rd talent?

You don’t have to solve a complicated equation Kwes to prove your worth.

We’ll see how today goes … its very possible 34 could get us a prospect rated higher than our first (like cb Booth).

You never know, maybe we trade the extra third for a veteran and Kwesi proves himself to be diabolically clever.

Right now he just seems too smart for his own good.

Why will it take luck? Cine appears to have better physical attributes than Hamilton. Is it possible that Cine was simply underrated by some?

This will all boil down to who did the best job of evaluating talent .. draft sites, talkvikes fans or the Vikings. It is possible that Kwesi & co did a good job of evaluating the talent that would be available at 12, the end of the round, at the top and middle of the second and decided that there was more value in making the move and picking up a 4th pick in the top 77. We should know by this time next year.




Brad H -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:22:43 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

I would not be surprised if after the Lions took Williams that someone said "Uh, hey Kwesi. Now that you gave the keys to a division rival allowing them to draft a gamebreaker and there are no cornerbacks left to cover him, we might have to draft a safety."

Kwesi looks up, sees a bunch of grizzled football veterans staring at him, and leaves to get a chi kale mango tea.

As I see it, the best defensive tackle in college football was available at 12 and we opted to go for a mediocre safety at 32 instead. For a team that gave up a billion points last season they may want to start focusing on difference makers on that side of the ball rather than collecting role players.

I said yesterday that the only d-lineman I would take over a corner would be Davis, and people in here know how I feel about defensive linemen (not much). Davis is a freakish talent. The Eagles didn't flinch when they saw him still available.

After Davis was Hamilton, who was rated the top safety. If we wanted a safety, someone needs to explain to me why we didn't take the top one when he was available.




The Happy Norseman -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:25:15 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: Todd M

It has been disappointing. I got excited for Harbough...didn't get him. J wanted to move on from Cousins...didn't. I dreampt of Hamilton falling and he did...we passed. And I will never be convinced it was a good trade. No matter how the players pan out. I'd be willing to bet no team has taken less to drop that far.

So, proof doesn't matter because your dreams and feelings trump all? It doesn't matter if you'd bet about the drop; what matters at this point is what happened and whether the value of the players we end up exceeds the value of picking someone at 12, or taking a different deal.

Kwesi took the deal that was available, passing on a couple of players a lot of us like, and he'll take players and/or make deals today, and in two or three years we'll have some answers, though maybe before. Everyone thinks they're smarter than Kwesi, and maybe they are, but you didn't get to make the decision and he had to make the decision. He had a process, made a decision, and now we'll see.

If you want to give up on him and the players the Vikings pick, go ahead. But many of you would be bitching no matter what was done, especially if there's some complexity to assessing the outcome.

I have read draft profiles that like Cine better than Hamilton. They say Cine is faster, plays faster and hits harder. I have also read that some sites seemed to penalize Cine because other members of the Georgia defense graded higher. I don't know which analysis is correct, but I hope Kwesi does. The Vikings said they had Cine rated in the 13-19 range. If you wanted Hamilton at 12 and we got someone even better at 32, that would be great. I guess we'll know a year from now.

What I do know is that we have the second pick today and the 2nd and 12th picks of the 3rd round. Today could be a really good day.


The Vikings had a need at safety, and Cine looks like a player who could help our defense. Most mock drafts I saw had him going early 2nd, so if Kwesi wanted him he had to pull the trigger at 32. I'm fine with all of that. However, as much as Cine fills a need, and should help, it's unlikely that he's going to affect games as dramatically as Jameson Williams will. Kwesi chose to shore up the defense instead of putting the offense into hyper drive, which is disappointing.




ratoppenheimer -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:29:15 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: lyle chabot

quote:

ORIGINAL: Murph

Players we could be targeting at 34?

Andrew Booth Jr., CB

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Booth is a sudden athlete with good body control and outstanding short-area burst. He's a scheme versatile corner who was asked to play a lot of coverages at Clemson and held up well across the board. He has playmaker instincts and attacks the ball like a receiver. He's a willing run defender who flies to the football. -- Steve Muench

Arnold Ebiketie, Edge

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Ebiketie has long arms and is a master at preventing offensive tackles from locking onto his pads as he advances his pass rush. He knows how to attack linemen and counters well when he doesn't win initially. Ebiketie has some issues anchoring when teams run at him, but he's relentless in pursuit. -- Steve Muench

Christian Watson, WR

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Watson is a big target with outstanding speed, longer arms and big hands. He's a threat to take the top off the coverage and is an instinctive open-field runner with good contact balance. Watson is a hands catcher with good body control and a wide catch radius. He's a smooth mover for his size and flashed as a route runner the week of the Senior Bowl. -- Steve Muench

If we could get Booth and Watson today it will take a little of the bad taste away from last night



I'm all over that...was thinking the same thing...is kwesi?....

also, at this point i think that maybe we should just draft malik willis...it's going to be insane to try to draft one next year as so many other teams need to do the same...perhaps o'connell can coach him up and feel good about him....

do that and trade the giants for that cb they're pushing....

tyler furness thinks willis is the next Michael Vick....


i think we should draft willis...if he's there at #34....




Brad H -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:31:13 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: ratoppenheimer

quote:

ORIGINAL: lyle chabot

quote:

ORIGINAL: Murph

Players we could be targeting at 34?

Andrew Booth Jr., CB

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Booth is a sudden athlete with good body control and outstanding short-area burst. He's a scheme versatile corner who was asked to play a lot of coverages at Clemson and held up well across the board. He has playmaker instincts and attacks the ball like a receiver. He's a willing run defender who flies to the football. -- Steve Muench

Arnold Ebiketie, Edge

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Ebiketie has long arms and is a master at preventing offensive tackles from locking onto his pads as he advances his pass rush. He knows how to attack linemen and counters well when he doesn't win initially. Ebiketie has some issues anchoring when teams run at him, but he's relentless in pursuit. -- Steve Muench

Christian Watson, WR

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Watson is a big target with outstanding speed, longer arms and big hands. He's a threat to take the top off the coverage and is an instinctive open-field runner with good contact balance. Watson is a hands catcher with good body control and a wide catch radius. He's a smooth mover for his size and flashed as a route runner the week of the Senior Bowl. -- Steve Muench

If we could get Booth and Watson today it will take a little of the bad taste away from last night



I'm all over that...was thinking the same thing...is kwesi?....

also, at this point i think that maybe we should just draft malik willis...it's going to be insane to try to draft one next year as so many other teams need to do the same...perhaps o'connell can coach him up and feel good about him....

do that and trade the giants for that cb they're pushing....

tyler furness thinks willis is the next Michael Vick....


i think we should draft willis...if he's there at #34....

I would be down with that.




The Happy Norseman -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:33:24 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: ratoppenheimer

quote:

ORIGINAL: lyle chabot

quote:

ORIGINAL: Murph

Players we could be targeting at 34?

Andrew Booth Jr., CB

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Booth is a sudden athlete with good body control and outstanding short-area burst. He's a scheme versatile corner who was asked to play a lot of coverages at Clemson and held up well across the board. He has playmaker instincts and attacks the ball like a receiver. He's a willing run defender who flies to the football. -- Steve Muench

Arnold Ebiketie, Edge

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Ebiketie has long arms and is a master at preventing offensive tackles from locking onto his pads as he advances his pass rush. He knows how to attack linemen and counters well when he doesn't win initially. Ebiketie has some issues anchoring when teams run at him, but he's relentless in pursuit. -- Steve Muench

Christian Watson, WR

Pre-Draft Analysis:

Watson is a big target with outstanding speed, longer arms and big hands. He's a threat to take the top off the coverage and is an instinctive open-field runner with good contact balance. Watson is a hands catcher with good body control and a wide catch radius. He's a smooth mover for his size and flashed as a route runner the week of the Senior Bowl. -- Steve Muench

If we could get Booth and Watson today it will take a little of the bad taste away from last night



I'm all over that...was thinking the same thing...is kwesi?....

also, at this point i think that maybe we should just draft malik willis...it's going to be insane to try to draft one next year as so many other teams need to do the same...perhaps o'connell can coach him up and feel good about him....

do that and trade the giants for that cb they're pushing....

tyler furness thinks willis is the next Michael Vick....


i think we should draft willis...if he's there at #34....


Kwesi definitely needs to draft a Theilen replacement. AJ Brown got traded and is now making $25 mil (!) a year. We're going to need a cheap WR2 to play alongside Jefferson because his salary is going to be outrageous when he signs a new deal.




Steve Lentz -> RE: 2022 NFL draft (4/29/2022 9:43:23 AM)

I wanted Willams real bad. I wanted Hamilton if that didn't work. I' wasn't happy.

I did find some information on Cine today.
3rd team All American.
MVP of National championship game.
4.37 in the 40.
His RAS Relative Athletic Score from the NFL combine was the 6th best in the past decade scoring a 9.9 out of 10.
His 40 yard dash and 10 yard split were both in the 99th percentile.




Page: <<   < prev  41 42 [43] 44 45   next >   >>



Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.5.5 Unicode