GordonGekko said:
Fair enough SSOG, I see your point. Let me be more specific. There are hits on this list and clearly Rat Face did a better job of drafting near the end versus in the middle, but that middle hurt the Broncos bad, it's why they couldn't sustain their dynasty run. Would giving more picks or higher picks from 98 to 04 via trades have made that much of a difference? ( Factor in all of Rat Face's other personnel moves as well, like importing the Browns D line and cherry picking veterans who clearly couldn't help his teams) I'm not picking on the Broncos here, I'm illustrating that having a draft pick isn't a magical elixir or having a high one isn't one either or having many many picks isn't going to save a franchise guaranteed.
I'm familiar with the argument- I've said for years that the reason Denver fell off the cliff after 2005 was because they drafted so abysmally from 2002 to 2004 and then had no veteran core. With that said... yes, absolutely, having more picks from 1998 to 2004 would have made a difference. Shanahan's drafting results from 1995-2001 (Davis, Mobley, Pryce, Neil, Greise, Wilson, Gary, Clark, O'Neal, Gold, Kennedy, Carlisle, and Anderson, just to name the regular starters) and from 2005-2008 (Cutler, Marshall, Scheffler, Dumervil, Clady, Royal, etc) demonstrate pretty clearly that Shanahan's not an inherently bad drafter. Worst case scenario, he's an average drafter who flipped a lot of "heads" early and late and "tails" in the middle... that's fine. Even his "bad free agency moves" were very much a "heads/tails" experience- Gerrard Warren wound up justifying the cost of all the Cleveland Browns all by himself, and Bertrand Berry and John Lynch were both phenomenal veteran acquisitions (as was Nick Ferguson and Champ Bailey, if you count Bailey). Give him more coins in the middle, and odds are he winds up with more "heads". There's no guarantee that he winds up with more "heads", but more coins = more chances.It's possible that Shanahan really was cursed for a 4-5 year span and could do no good, and you could give him 50 draft picks and he'd whiff on them all... but I think it's far more likely that a couple of random events wound up grouping in such a way as to suggest that they were something other than random events.
daveR said:
Maybe the NFL should go auction instead of draft...
Yes, but that would only increase the salaries paid to rookies.I do think it's arguable that with a salary floor and a salary cap, a draft is no longer necessary to promote parity. Some teams in less attractive cities/with poorer owners (i.e., lower signing bonuses) might still be slightly disadvantaged, but I don't think parity would be threatened (teams now have bad coaches/GMs, too).
What if, instead of auctioning with real money, they auctioned with some sort of "auction points" system? If you finish 0-16, you get 1,000 "auction points". If you finish 16-0, you get 200 "auction points". They could either come up with an "auction points" formula (i.e. every team gets 200 to start, every loss adds 50 more, maybe a bonus for missing the playoffs, etc), or else they could just come up with fixed "auction point" values for every finish from 1st to 32nd (i.e. the worst team gets 1,000, regardless of record). All players are in the pool, teams bid on them. Obviously it's a pipe dream, but I think it'd be a much better way to reward bad teams.Taking it even further, auction points could be tradeable, and you could even fix a rookie pay scale based on the amount of auction points spent to acquire a player. Say, each rookie gets a $200,000 minimum yearly salary, and every "auction point" raises it by $5,000 (spend 500 "auction points" on a guy, he gets a $2.7 million annual contract). It rewards bad teams, it simplifies trades (i.e. there's no more of that "my first rounder is too high to trade for this guy, but my second rounder is too low" syndrome), and it brings rookie salaries back under control. Plus, there's no way M-T could argue that bad teams were being disadvantaged. Bad teams could either bring in a few "studs" or a handful of bargains, depending on which strategy better suited team needs.