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I've been giving this a lot of thought lately, and decided to make myself the GM for the next 3 months and create a battle plan that will make us competitive within 2 years and enjoyable (at worst) to watch next year.
FA -
1. Our own - Most of this should be credited to Phil Perry. He did all the work, I just liked most of what he chose.
Resign - Owenu, Duggar, Henry, (and I'd add small deals for PBrown, and MWilson)
Add- Ridley WR, JWilliams OT, KFuller CB and DHunter Edge. Perry gives fair market deals to everyone and still claims to have over $10MM left when you get to camp. (it would be even more if you add Wilson as your bridge QB at around $1MM rather than Brissett at $8MM like Perry did.)
With Hunter on the team you trade MJudon for a 3rd or 4th, and instead of having a great rusher who is 32 and near the end, you have a great YOUNG rusher and resign Uche and go with Hunter, Uche and Jennings as your 3 edge guy rotation
That is a lot of money an a LOT of holes filled. Then you can have as fairly solid OL of Williams, Strange, Andrews, Sow, Owenu. Henry at TE and a WR group of Ridley and Parker on the outside and Pop in the slot. That is a good start to an improvement at WR. We have a clear #1 in Ridley and a solid guy in Parker with size on the other side. Douglas, who was probably our best WR last season should make a leap.
The other thing I do before the draft is to extend Barmore. I would really like to see that happen well before camp.
Draft -
Now the REALLY hard stuff needs to happen. First a decision has to be made at QB. I like adding Wilson, because at worst he's a quality NFL starter and whomever you add at QB will benefit from sitting for a year or 2.
I have heard so much about all the QB's so far. Williams seems like he's a lock to go #1. Daniels, has all the physical talent in the world and will likely rise after the combine. Maye has close to the athletic ability and escapability, but he's likely to be the more durable. Seems like you can't lose with any of those first 3 picks. Unfortunately history has shown us that at LEAST, one of those picks are going to bust or at best disappoint. Seems like a crap shoot when the music stops one of those first 3 picks are going to unable to find a seat at the table.
The concensus is that after those 3 there are 3 very good QB prospects that will be available (McCarthy, Pennix, and Nix) and for various reasons were thought to be end of the first round top 10 of the 2nd round talent. McCarthy because he is so young and wasn't asked to do much at Michigan, Pennix because of age and injury issues, and Nix because of age and arm questions. (you might want to add Rattler as well) But the bottom line is that there IS a gap between the first and 2nd tier QB's.
History tells us that the hype on QB's will only go UP as the draft season goes on. I'm seeing a lot of mocks where McCarthy is going in the 10-12 range. It would not shock me in the least to see 6 guys picked in the first round.
So in a draft where I think I need to pick 4 guys who will have significant roles by year 2, I want as many picks as possible on day 2, I will be willing to trade that #3 for to Atlanta at #8 for their 2nd in this round and a conditional first round pick in 25 (based on percentage of snaps the #3 pick takes in 24, lets say 55%) Then if it looks like McCarthy might still be there at 12, I'd trade down again with Denver (with the promise that they won't take McCarthy with #8 and pick up 3rd round picks in this year and next year's draft.
Then I get McCarthy at #12 and have added AT LEAST 2 quality picks in this draft and a likely first and 3rd in net year's draft. I get my QB of the future and when he's ready to start, he won't be 21 year old 201lb QB with a decent arm, but a much stronger 220lb guy with a strong arm in a year or 2.
The next part of my draft strategy is to go against conventional wisdom and when it comes time to look at receivers, think TE and not WR. Simply because it is harder to find the quality TE than the quality WR. There are simply so MANY NFL caliber WR's that the colleges are producing that you HAVE to go looking for the rarer species. In my ideal scenario with my first pick in the 2nd I'm looking for the best TE available. with my 2nd I'm looking OT
The end result of this strategy is that you fill most of the holes you had on the OL. You add your QB of the future without having to jump right in and start his first year, You have 4 more picks in the top 100 to add depth and explosiveness plus adding 2 more high picks for next year's draft. Imho, this strategy will leave us with the probability of having a competitive interesting team to watch next year, with an outside chance of a playoff appearance, and going into 2025 with a reasonable amount of cap space and 2 first round picks.
I'm so happy with this plan I gave myself a contract extension. What do you think?
FA -
1. Our own - Most of this should be credited to Phil Perry. He did all the work, I just liked most of what he chose.
Resign - Owenu, Duggar, Henry, (and I'd add small deals for PBrown, and MWilson)
Add- Ridley WR, JWilliams OT, KFuller CB and DHunter Edge. Perry gives fair market deals to everyone and still claims to have over $10MM left when you get to camp. (it would be even more if you add Wilson as your bridge QB at around $1MM rather than Brissett at $8MM like Perry did.)
With Hunter on the team you trade MJudon for a 3rd or 4th, and instead of having a great rusher who is 32 and near the end, you have a great YOUNG rusher and resign Uche and go with Hunter, Uche and Jennings as your 3 edge guy rotation
That is a lot of money an a LOT of holes filled. Then you can have as fairly solid OL of Williams, Strange, Andrews, Sow, Owenu. Henry at TE and a WR group of Ridley and Parker on the outside and Pop in the slot. That is a good start to an improvement at WR. We have a clear #1 in Ridley and a solid guy in Parker with size on the other side. Douglas, who was probably our best WR last season should make a leap.
The other thing I do before the draft is to extend Barmore. I would really like to see that happen well before camp.
Draft -
Now the REALLY hard stuff needs to happen. First a decision has to be made at QB. I like adding Wilson, because at worst he's a quality NFL starter and whomever you add at QB will benefit from sitting for a year or 2.
I have heard so much about all the QB's so far. Williams seems like he's a lock to go #1. Daniels, has all the physical talent in the world and will likely rise after the combine. Maye has close to the athletic ability and escapability, but he's likely to be the more durable. Seems like you can't lose with any of those first 3 picks. Unfortunately history has shown us that at LEAST, one of those picks are going to bust or at best disappoint. Seems like a crap shoot when the music stops one of those first 3 picks are going to unable to find a seat at the table.
The concensus is that after those 3 there are 3 very good QB prospects that will be available (McCarthy, Pennix, and Nix) and for various reasons were thought to be end of the first round top 10 of the 2nd round talent. McCarthy because he is so young and wasn't asked to do much at Michigan, Pennix because of age and injury issues, and Nix because of age and arm questions. (you might want to add Rattler as well) But the bottom line is that there IS a gap between the first and 2nd tier QB's.
History tells us that the hype on QB's will only go UP as the draft season goes on. I'm seeing a lot of mocks where McCarthy is going in the 10-12 range. It would not shock me in the least to see 6 guys picked in the first round.
So in a draft where I think I need to pick 4 guys who will have significant roles by year 2, I want as many picks as possible on day 2, I will be willing to trade that #3 for to Atlanta at #8 for their 2nd in this round and a conditional first round pick in 25 (based on percentage of snaps the #3 pick takes in 24, lets say 55%) Then if it looks like McCarthy might still be there at 12, I'd trade down again with Denver (with the promise that they won't take McCarthy with #8 and pick up 3rd round picks in this year and next year's draft.
Then I get McCarthy at #12 and have added AT LEAST 2 quality picks in this draft and a likely first and 3rd in net year's draft. I get my QB of the future and when he's ready to start, he won't be 21 year old 201lb QB with a decent arm, but a much stronger 220lb guy with a strong arm in a year or 2.
The next part of my draft strategy is to go against conventional wisdom and when it comes time to look at receivers, think TE and not WR. Simply because it is harder to find the quality TE than the quality WR. There are simply so MANY NFL caliber WR's that the colleges are producing that you HAVE to go looking for the rarer species. In my ideal scenario with my first pick in the 2nd I'm looking for the best TE available. with my 2nd I'm looking OT
The end result of this strategy is that you fill most of the holes you had on the OL. You add your QB of the future without having to jump right in and start his first year, You have 4 more picks in the top 100 to add depth and explosiveness plus adding 2 more high picks for next year's draft. Imho, this strategy will leave us with the probability of having a competitive interesting team to watch next year, with an outside chance of a playoff appearance, and going into 2025 with a reasonable amount of cap space and 2 first round picks.
I'm so happy with this plan I gave myself a contract extension. What do you think?