Also it was KW3’s rookie season, dude gets no pass for not being perfect? I just don’t get it.
No one’s saying he had to be perfect.
Not one of us have made that statement.
But if he was better in short yardage; better at not having 0 or negative rushing plays; better in the receiving game, Seattle wouldn’t have spent a 2nd on Charbonnet.
I will never, ever be convinced that sort of draft capital would ever be spent by a team on a “depth” pick.
Cmon
Why not? The Seahawks did it with Penny when they took him 1st round, and didn’t start him until his 4th pro season (I get that he missed a lot of time to injury, but it took until his 31st game played to start and only after Carson got hurt.) I’m sure they didn’t draft him that high with the intention of not starting him eventually, but Carroll sure took his sweet time giving Penny the keys to the car, and that unfortunately didn’t last long for him either after fracturing his tibia last year.
(I was tempted to mention Walker as a second rounder last year, but I thought it was obvious he was brought in with the mind that Penny was in a walk year and would either be priced out or too injury prone to trust for another season.)
There’s also AJ Dillon in the second round in 2020, who everyone is STILL waiting to overtake Aaron Jones. Dillon had the draft capital of a starter but has only started 5 out of 45 games played. He was a luxury pick then, and remains one now.
Ameer Abdullah went second round in 2015. Has he been anything BUT a depth piece in his career? How about Giovani Bernard in 2013? History is full of guys taken around where Charbs has been taken who were treated as depth. That’s not to say that’ll be his fate either. But it wouldn’t be the first time a team, with an established RB1, took another RB high in the draft and used him almost strictly as a backup.