ratoppenheimer
Posts: 9563
Joined: 12/9/2007
From: cascais, portugal...still in exile
Status: online
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson quote:
ORIGINAL: ratoppenheimer quote:
ORIGINAL: Bruce Johnson I was going to the draft trade chart and calculating what the difference was between the value of the pick we lost for Yannick Ngakoue and the value we got for trading him. The net was an end of the second round pick. Our pick was an upper half of the second round and the pick we got was an end of the third round selection. The value of the second rounder was almost three times as much as what we got back. That probably puts it into better perspective and also gives perspective on how expensive it will be to get back into the second round. If we do, it will certainly have to be later in the second round. Even that will cost our third (a higher third) and the Ravens third. The more I think about it, the more painful is the reality. The Vikings probably understand the math better than we do and must be very much inclined to drop down from their first round pick. That would be the much less painful way to retrieve a second rounder. Well, I don't know about that. Checking the trade chart, we would have to trade back to pick 21 just to get a later second rounder in return. Ouch. That is the reality. These draft picks are very much coveted. We throw in a 3rd/4th for an early pick...best case scenario a qb falls.... A third round pick is worth slightly less than half of the comparable second round pick. It's kind of like a logarithmic value scale, if that makes any sense. It's not linear. Perhaps a more reasonable way (and less painful) would be to work on both ends. What I mean is to trade back a little bit from #14 and to trade up from pick (is it #79?) So here's an example of that. Let's say they start out the draft and trade back three spots in the first. That would yield a fifth rounder, but lets say the team trading up overpays a bit because the options will be worth it. So lets say they offer a back of the fourth rounder. Shoot. That's the reality. So next we trade both of our third round picks plus the back end of the fourth rounder and we can get somewhere about two thirds of the way into the second round. Say pick #52. The result would be pick 17, 52 and then that would be it until day three when we would have a number of selections in rounds four and five. Maybe one in six, but that's it as it stands now. Sometimes around pick #52 you can get a player who was hopeful of getting selected in the back end of round one, but slipped all the way to 52. That does happen. If you're lucky you can get a player like O'Brien or Ezra Cleveland. Cleveland is really a good example. I'm thinking there were teams considering to take him in the first round, but he somehow dropped to us in the second. Neither Cleveland or O'Neil started for game one of their rookie seasons, but started later and played relatively well. Sorry for my rambling. I'm sort of thinking out loud here. I don't know what you all think of this thinking. nfl draft chart points.... vikings give: 14 - 1,100 78 - 200 125 - 47 #17 team gives: 17 - 950 49 - 410
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the journey...is paradise.
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