Yep, see? Silver linings.Remember, it isn’t just ONE higher draft pick, it's six, one in each round. We gave up our 5th round pick in the Rasul Douglas trade.
Yep, see? Silver linings.Remember, it isn’t just ONE higher draft pick, it's six, one in each round. We gave up our 5th round pick in the Rasul Douglas trade.
Exactly. Plus, if I’m not mistaken, draft order applies universally. Such as our compensatory selections, waiver wire for vested players, etc. . So all across the board the NFL promotes a lower team’s placing to position them to remain competitive.Remember, it isn’t just ONE higher draft pick, it's six, one in each round. We gave up our 5th round pick in the Rasul Douglas trade.
Yup and of course that first rounder, if somewhere in the top 5 can be VERY valuable. The last time that the Packers had a top 5 pick was in 2006, they selected AJ Hawk with the #5 pick. Top 3 pick? That was in 1989, when most of the current Packers weren't even born. Arguably, the Packers biggest draft bust in their history, Tony Mandarich was selected with the #2 pick.Exactly. Plus, if I’m not mistaken, draft order applies universally. Such as our compensatory selections, waiver wire for vested players, etc. . So all across the board the NFL promotes a lower team’s placing to position them to remain competitive.
We’ve been on the opposite side of that help in the vast majority of seasons going back 3 decades, so it’s no wonder we don’t value these benefits, we’ve rarely been able to apply them.
Yup and you also start playing some of your younger guys more, to give them valuable NFL experience, as well as being able to evaluate and hopefully improve their skills for 2024 and beyond.Yep, see? Silver linings.
Yup and of course that first rounder, if somewhere in the top 5 can be VERY valuable. The last time that the Packers had a top 5 pick was in 2006, they selected AJ Hawk with the #5 pick. Top 3 pick? That was in 1989, when most of the current Packers weren't even born. Arguably, the Packers biggest draft bust in their history, Tony Mandarich was selected with the #2 pick.
I would love to see the Packers continue to build on Sundays game, more development of the young guys, especially Love and I am just fine with ending the season with 3-4 wins, if that gets Gute a top 1 or 2 in every round. If the Packers see Love as their future QB, that first round pick could be traded to a team that desperately wants a top QB and in return, possibly some really decent draft Capital for Gute to fill some holes.
Yes, the pitfalls of not having a QB that you are 100% positive in for the future. Teams have turned themselves around by selecting a top QB and teams have dug themselves a deeper hole by striking out on a "top QB". Without a doubt, QB is really the hardest position to predict the final results in the NFL.The danger I fearful of Gute's temptation at picking a QB there would cause him to in essence IMO possibly set the team back by giving us a rookie QB who IMO for 2024 would have less a chance of winning than Love will in his second year. However, you do that of course if you feel that Love's ceiling isn't ever going to be what you want and you gamble to see if a rookie's will be at the cost of another growth year.
The league rules have worked against us for 30 years. Makes our accomplishments all the more admirable. Kudos again to our management teams, past and present.Exactly. Plus, if I’m not mistaken, draft order applies universally. Such as our compensatory selections, waiver wire for vested players, etc. . So all across the board the NFL promotes a lower team’s placing to position them to remain competitive.
We’ve been on the opposite side of that help in the vast majority of seasons going back 3 decades, so it’s no wonder we don’t value these benefits, we’ve rarely been able to apply them.
I haven't seen any generational type talent that will be coming out in the next draft but perhaps Tynimiller or Dantes could provide more insight on that.Yup and of course that first rounder, if somewhere in the top 5 can be VERY valuable. The last time that the Packers had a top 5 pick was in 2006, they selected AJ Hawk with the #5 pick. Top 3 pick? That was in 1989, when most of the current Packers weren't even born. Arguably, the Packers biggest draft bust in their history, Tony Mandarich was selected with the #2 pick.
I would love to see the Packers continue to build on Sundays game, more development of the young guys, especially Love and I am just fine with ending the season with 3-4 wins, if that gets Gute a top 1 or 2 in every round. If the Packers see Love as their future QB, that first round pick could be traded to a team that desperately wants a top QB and in return, possibly some really decent draft Capital for Gute to fill some holes.
If the draft were today, the Packers would hold the #6 spot.
Go Panthers, Cardinals, Giants, Bears, Rams, Patriots and Titans!
I agree that the Packer organization deserves a lot of credit for their success for so many years, while drafting late in most rounds.The league rules have worked against us for 30 years. Makes our accomplishments all the more admirable. Kudos again to our management teams, past and present.
Personally, I think Marvin Harrison Jr. would be my pick. I know in a previous post I said that the Packers should wait on a WR, since Watson, Doubs and Reed are all so young and developing. However, MHJ....he is the REAL deal and this guy is about as close as you ever come to a sure FOHF pick.I haven't seen any generational type talent that will be coming out in the next draft but perhaps Tynimiller or Dantes could provide more insight on that.
1. I just looked at last years comp picks and they seem to start out last to first but do not seem to stay that way. Does anybody know the exact method of how the picks are assigned? Thanks in advance.
2. Drafting a QB early (top 112) IMO would be worse than drafting Love in the 1st place.
I don't think they are assigned strictly on the position that the team finished the previous season. That might factor into the "highly guarded Secret formula" that determines comp picks, but I think other factors weigh into where the pick lands.1. I just looked at last years comp picks and they seem to start out last to first but do not seem to stay that way. Does anybody know the exact method of how the picks are assigned? Thanks in advance.
I saw that post too, but I don't think it is correct.I am not sure either. Someone implied that the Pack would not only get a better pick each round but also in each compensatory round. That did not sound correct to me but I do not actually know the correct answer.
I still think they’ll commit 1 more season with Love based on what I’m seeing. What’s the worst thing? Love wins 2-4 games next year? That sounds like another top 5 pick in the 2025 draft and a feasible trade up to a top 2-3 overall.The danger I fearful of Gute's temptation at picking a QB there would cause him to in essence IMO possibly set the team back by giving us a rookie QB who IMO for 2024 would have less a chance of winning than Love will in his second year. However, you do that of course if you feel that Love's ceiling isn't ever going to be what you want and you gamble to see if a rookie's will be at the cost of another growth year.
I agree. Unless of course, they decide that Love isn't their guy.I still think they’ll commit 1 more season with Love based on what I’m seeing. What’s the worst thing? Love wins 2-4 games next year? That sounds like another top 5 pick in the 2025 draft and a feasible trade up to a top 2-3 overall.
He’d have to take a major step backwards. For a first year starter he’s been fine. Several of these past games were losses more due to other factors than Jordan imo. Again he gets all the accolades and all the blame. Mostly Blame when it’s a bunch of green peas around himI agree. Unless of course, they decide that Love isn't their guy.
Oh I agree with your assessment 100%, but the coaches and Gute are going to have a much clearer picture of Love's future in Green Bay than you or I.He’d have to take a major step backwards. For a first year starter he’s been fine. Several of these past games were losses more due to other factors than Jordan imo. Again he gets all the accolades and all the blame. Mostly Blame when it’s a bunch of green peas around him
Yes and No.I thought the refs were supposed to let the play go on before blowing the whistle. Just in case. That guy made a real error of judgement. Another reason for having full time officials. And I assume it was the whistle that caused the replay people to not change the call.