- Thread starter
- #1
NinerSickness
Well-Known Member
- 61,386
- 11,425
- 1,033
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2011
- Hoopla Cash
- $ 200.00
Drafting NFL prospects is not just about determining how good a player is, it's about projecting how good he will be over the course of his career. It's the exact same thing as investing in the stock market. Looking at what a stock has done in the past tells you next to nothing about what it's going to do in the future.
Most people invest by looking at what something has done and thinking it will continue that way. I don't know how many people were telling me to invest in silver back in 2011. My reaction was always the same: there are 3 words you want to avoid when investing - ALL TIME HIGH. Silver was near an all-time high, and I thought that people had already missed the boat. I was right.
As it pertains to NFL prospects, determining a player's true value s about a lot of variables, but one is looking at the things that make them go up or down on a big board and then figuring whether that movement was (1) too big of a movement (2) not a big enough movement or (3) right around the right movement. For example - Jarvis Jones' neck issue dropped his stock. We'll know how much on draft day. Was the drop too much? Not enough? Just right? If you think a player's stock took WAY too big of a hit, you move up or down to get him. If it wasn't a big enough hit, just pass on him. And the reverse is true when their stocks go up.
Another variable is things you see that most people don't. This is rare because the NFL is getting really good at crossing all their t's and dotting all their i's. But they're only human, and some of them are downright inept (Terry Donahue, Al Davis, Howie Roseman, etc). Some of them are geniuses (Bill Walsh, Jimmy Johnson, Ozzie Newsome, etc).
All of these variables go into 2 different things - (1) bang for yer buck and (2) need. Need is the tie-breaker IMO. Bang for yer buck means if there are 2 players whom you see as equal value, you take the one who drops lower. It also means that if there's a player who's great in the top 10 but there's a player who's ALMOST as good as him in the 7th round, the 7th round pick is a lot more bang for yer buck (except with elite QBs; and this is an extreme example anyway).
What's the point of all of this? I'm writing this because of my interest in Tyler Bray. Tyler Bray is a penny sock that will turn into 5 dollars in a few years. He's by far the most talented passer in the draft, and he should have gone back to school because he needs more time to develop as a QB. However, he left early before the NFL got a chance to see him as a mature QB. His biggest problems are short-term problems. Maturity - time fixes that. Accuracy - working with Harbaugh will go a long way towards fixing that.
What coaching cannot help is a QB's ability to make any possible throw. Bray can do that. He's tall & stands tall in the pocket. And he doesn't have to wind up very much at all or even step very much into the throw to put it on a rope 30 yards downfield. And with the lack of talent at QB in college football right now, his value is even higher. Basically, he's a franchise QB in waiting. If a team takes him & gives him a year & a half to sit & learn, they're going to thank their lucky stars. There's no good reason he should be there outside of the top 15 picks, and if you can get that kind of value in the 2nd round, it's a steal.
Most people invest by looking at what something has done and thinking it will continue that way. I don't know how many people were telling me to invest in silver back in 2011. My reaction was always the same: there are 3 words you want to avoid when investing - ALL TIME HIGH. Silver was near an all-time high, and I thought that people had already missed the boat. I was right.
As it pertains to NFL prospects, determining a player's true value s about a lot of variables, but one is looking at the things that make them go up or down on a big board and then figuring whether that movement was (1) too big of a movement (2) not a big enough movement or (3) right around the right movement. For example - Jarvis Jones' neck issue dropped his stock. We'll know how much on draft day. Was the drop too much? Not enough? Just right? If you think a player's stock took WAY too big of a hit, you move up or down to get him. If it wasn't a big enough hit, just pass on him. And the reverse is true when their stocks go up.
Another variable is things you see that most people don't. This is rare because the NFL is getting really good at crossing all their t's and dotting all their i's. But they're only human, and some of them are downright inept (Terry Donahue, Al Davis, Howie Roseman, etc). Some of them are geniuses (Bill Walsh, Jimmy Johnson, Ozzie Newsome, etc).
All of these variables go into 2 different things - (1) bang for yer buck and (2) need. Need is the tie-breaker IMO. Bang for yer buck means if there are 2 players whom you see as equal value, you take the one who drops lower. It also means that if there's a player who's great in the top 10 but there's a player who's ALMOST as good as him in the 7th round, the 7th round pick is a lot more bang for yer buck (except with elite QBs; and this is an extreme example anyway).
What's the point of all of this? I'm writing this because of my interest in Tyler Bray. Tyler Bray is a penny sock that will turn into 5 dollars in a few years. He's by far the most talented passer in the draft, and he should have gone back to school because he needs more time to develop as a QB. However, he left early before the NFL got a chance to see him as a mature QB. His biggest problems are short-term problems. Maturity - time fixes that. Accuracy - working with Harbaugh will go a long way towards fixing that.
What coaching cannot help is a QB's ability to make any possible throw. Bray can do that. He's tall & stands tall in the pocket. And he doesn't have to wind up very much at all or even step very much into the throw to put it on a rope 30 yards downfield. And with the lack of talent at QB in college football right now, his value is even higher. Basically, he's a franchise QB in waiting. If a team takes him & gives him a year & a half to sit & learn, they're going to thank their lucky stars. There's no good reason he should be there outside of the top 15 picks, and if you can get that kind of value in the 2nd round, it's a steal.