Vinny
shiny happy fan
Good article. If you look at the Texans drafts we seem to follow this philosophy as well. We took a young back up QB in Ragone when everyone thought we wasted a pick, but now we have a young player who has been in our system for years who is just starting to find himself as an NFL player. It is nice that we are not out in the FA market groping for a back up QB and hoping he picks up our system in one year or less. Lord, Hollings and Earl are also the same type of picks.
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/3482846
The immediate reaction often is to judge a draft based on a team's current needs. The smartest teams aren't drafting for need. They are filling their holes with free agents, which allows them to draft the best available players -- or draft for the future.
...It was puzzling, for instance, when the Bills used their 2003 first-round pick on running back Willis McGahee, who wouldn't be ready to play until 2004 because of a knee injury. They already had a 1,000-yard back in Travis Henry. They were coming off an 8-8 season and had numerous pressing needs. And their coach at the time, Gregg Williams, was heading into a make-or-break season. The Bills were prioritizing the future over the present when they didn't have the luxury of doing so.
One of the benefits of drafting for the future is it takes heat off the rookie and allows him to develop at a more natural pace as the coaching staff learns how to best use his skills. The pressure to get high draft picks to produce immediately contributes to many of them swerving off the road. Coming in behind an established veteran, as Sheppard did, can help a player develop.
"It's tough for rookies to step in and play in the National Football League," Eagles coach Andy Reid says. "If you can buy them a year to learn, that's great."
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/3482846