You are the Skins new GM, what is YOUR next move?

Washington Football Game Day discussions for 2003, 2004, and 2005

As the new Skins GM, what is your move?

Keep the #6 and draft Gaines Adams
4
10%
Keep the #6 and draft Jamal Anderson
1
2%
Keep the #6 and draft Okoye
5
12%
Keep the #6 and draft Branch
0
No votes
Trade down just a few spots, still get a top 12 guy
15
36%
Trade down to bottom of 1st rd, acquire more picks
4
10%
Trade #6 for #31 and Briggs plus sign him to big $$$
2
5%
Trade #6 for Pats #24 or #28 and Asante Samuel
2
5%
Trade #6 plus Springs or 2008 picks for Detroits #2 (Calvin Johnson)
4
10%
None of the above, will elaborate in my post
5
12%
 
Total votes: 42

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Post by 1niksder »

HEROHAMO wrote:First off I am looking to move Marshall. Whomever team is willing to give up a first round pick or 2,3 round pick I make the move.

2nd Offer Detroit,Springs and Number six for there no. 2 pick.

With the Number 2 pick I pick up Calvin Johnson.

With Calvin Johnson I offer Tampa Bay a deal in which we trade Johnson and get a second and maybe a third,fourth,fifth,sixth or even a seventh round pick.

Tampa mostly likely gives up there spot and give us a second and third round pick.

With no. 4 pick I take Laron Landry.

With Tampas second Round pick we aquired I take Jarvis Moss.

With the other second round pick aquired for Marshall deal I take Quentin Moses from Georgia he should be available in second round.

Overall goal for draft- Laron Landry, DE,DE or Laron Landry DE,DT

Look out... I think the Bucs are trying to cut you out of the deal,

Bucs trading up?
<Apr. 9> The Bucs appear to be leaning toward trading up to the No. 2 pick to get Georgia Tech wide receiver Calvin Johnson, according to ESPN.com's John Clayton. That is why they are trying to do everything possible to make sure the Raiders draft JaMarcus Russell at No. 1. If the Raiders trade for the Lions' Josh McCown, which has been rumored, they might not feel a sense of urgency to draft a quarterback.
The Bucs are keeping in touch with the Lions, who hold the No. 2 pick, about keeping the trade door open. With an extra second-round pick thanks to the Anthony McFarland trade last season, the Bucs have the ammunition to get the player they want.
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Post by Redskins Rule »

I say keep the pick and draft Jamaal Anderson. I watched alot of Arkansas games last year and I'd be shocked if Jamaal turnes out to be a bust.

I must admit that I never did see Gaines Adams play, but when I heard that the Redskins Front Office weren't interested in overpaying for him............well, that told me something! :)

Seriously, Jamaal has the speed and the strength to be our best defensive end and while it would be a great addition to draft Branch or Okoye we are getting old and weak at our defensive end spot. Philip Daniels is very good when he's healthy and Wynn is too, but their age is showing out there on the field. At the defensive tackle position we have young Golston and a prospect in Montgomery. And of course Griffin who is good even when he's playing hurt. We just don't have that at our defensive end position and this years draft has quite a few good defensive ends to choose from............and the Redskins Front Office better overpay for the best one! I'll be pissed if they screw this up!!!
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Post by Redskins Rule »

1niksder wrote:
HEROHAMO wrote:First off I am looking to move Marshall. Whomever team is willing to give up a first round pick or 2,3 round pick I make the move.

2nd Offer Detroit,Springs and Number six for there no. 2 pick.

With the Number 2 pick I pick up Calvin Johnson.

With Calvin Johnson I offer Tampa Bay a deal in which we trade Johnson and get a second and maybe a third,fourth,fifth,sixth or even a seventh round pick.

Tampa mostly likely gives up there spot and give us a second and third round pick.

With no. 4 pick I take Laron Landry.

With Tampas second Round pick we aquired I take Jarvis Moss.

With the other second round pick aquired for Marshall deal I take Quentin Moses from Georgia he should be available in second round.

Overall goal for draft- Laron Landry, DE,DE or Laron Landry DE,DT

Look out... I think the Bucs are trying to cut you out of the deal,

Bucs trading up?
<Apr. 9> The Bucs appear to be leaning toward trading up to the No. 2 pick to get Georgia Tech wide receiver Calvin Johnson, according to ESPN.com's John Clayton. That is why they are trying to do everything possible to make sure the Raiders draft JaMarcus Russell at No. 1. If the Raiders trade for the Lions' Josh McCown, which has been rumored, they might not feel a sense of urgency to draft a quarterback.
The Bucs are keeping in touch with the Lions, who hold the No. 2 pick, about keeping the trade door open. With an extra second-round pick thanks to the Anthony McFarland trade last season, the Bucs have the ammunition to get the player they want.


:lol:

Looks like the Lions have now earned a reputation for choosing the best wide reciever in every draft! Fifty Bucks says that Calvin Johnson's agent paid John Clayton to say that with hopes that his client will get taken sooner.........and of course get paid more.
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Post by fleetus »

I think the Raiders really want to draft Calvin Johnson, but they know Russell is the most valuable to other teams. So if anyone is going to pay to trade up to #1, it will most likely be for Russell. I see a possible shake up, where Detroit trades McCown to the Raiders. Raiders select Johnson #1. Lions stay at #2 and take Russell. Browns take Peterson. Tampa takes Gaines Adams. Cardinals select Joe Thomas. AND WE TAKE OKOYE (or Jamaal Anderson). Both of which I think are great picks at #6.

I also see the Raiders and Packers pulling the trigger on a draft day trade to send Randy Moss for draft picks.
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Post by Fios »

I'd said before that Millen would have to be an idiot not to take Joe Thomas but the Lions have made some moves to sort-of address their AWWWWWWWWWWFUL offensive line so he probably feels he can go elsewhere.
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Post by HEROHAMO »

air_hog wrote:
Redskin in Canada wrote:
air_hog wrote:What, what's wrong with shopping the 6th Pick around, do you want to keep it and have just 1 frist day pick?

And what's your beef with Okoye?

1) Everybody is expecting us to give it away for cheap.

2) Nothing. He is one of the top 2 DTs in the draft and likely to be gone by the 6th pick if he goes ahead as the number 1 DT. But -even- if he is there, the Skins will not pick him.

BUT if we trade down and he is still availbale, well, that is another story. :wink:


Well, 1) The reason everyone is expecting us to give it away for cheap is because A) C'mon it's the Redskins FO here.

and B) Because really there is no value at our pick like I said, unless a top tier guys slides to us. I mean, no team is going to give an arm and a leg to trade up for Jamaal Anderson. Besides the absolute top 3-4 guys, there is no one player worth trading up for.

And I don't know why you think the Skins won't pick Okoye. Word is they are un-impressed with Adams + Branch's work ethics, and Okoye is known for his work ethic, not to mention he is an intelligent and young man. What's wrong with that?
I love Okoye. I just think we have to get more picks by trading down this year.

We only have one pick until I think the Fifth round. Its absolutly imperative that we at least get a low first round and a second round pick at the worst case scenerio.

We could at least pick up two solid defensive players.

If we pick up just one player at no.6 then this draft IMHO will have been a failure.
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Post by SkinsFreak »

Everyone talks about trading down and how it is the right thing to do and the only way to go. I like the idea too but I think many of you think there are a dozen teams willing to throw the house at us to trade up. I don't believe that is the case. Not to mention, every team in the top ten would trade down for the right offer, as all would want to maximize the return or yield of their respective picks. ALL will be willing to listen to potential trade offers. So trading down is easier said than done. No one knows yet, but the Skins may not be able to trade down, and we have to be prepared for that. So if they don't trade down on draft day, keep in mind that maybe they couldn't or didn't get the right offer.
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Post by SkinsFreak »

HEROHAMO wrote:If we pick up just one player at no.6 then this draft IMHO will have been a failure.


A failure? I don't agree with that at all.

Go to Redskins.com and listen to Gibbs' press conference from today. Joe said that "if you guessed you were going to move back, it rarely happens." He went on to say that moving up IS something that you control over, but in all, it's hard to make a move there. He basically said that he just figures they will pick at #6 but are preparing in case something does come along.

So I don't think it would be fair to call it a "failure" if they can't move back. Too many things that are out of their control will have to happen if they want to trade down.
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Post by Fios »

Agreed, the Redskins ability to trade down is contingent on the decisions of the five teams picking ahead of them. Millen seems to think he's addressed the Lions offensive line woes, that doesn't bode well for the Redskins' chances of trading down. If Peterson, Quinn or Thomas should drop to the sixth slot, the Redskins can slide down. (I'm not even entertaining the notion that Johnson will still be there.) If those guys all go beforehand, the Redskins will probably be picking sixth. And even if they do pix sixth, they will be picking to address a problem area, that can't be qualified as a failure. I honestly thought the Redskins were going to be able to drop but I'm pessimistic about it now.
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Post by fleetus »

I think Quinn will be there at #6. Question is, does anyone want him at #6? I'm not sure anyone likes Quinn enough to trade up to #6 to get him? Dolphins might be thinking they can stay at #9 and still get him. Vikings at #7 are the only other possibility. I think the first 5 picks will be Russell, Johnson,Peterson, Adams, Thomas. We might be best off just to go ahead and draft either Okoye or Anderson.
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Post by PulpExposure »

Fios wrote:Agreed, the Redskins ability to trade down is contingent on the decisions of the five teams picking ahead of them. Millen seems to think he's addressed the Lions offensive line woes, that doesn't bode well for the Redskins' chances of trading down. If Peterson, Quinn or Thomas should drop to the sixth slot, the Redskins can slide down. (I'm not even entertaining the notion that Johnson will still be there.) If those guys all go beforehand, the Redskins will probably be picking sixth. And even if they do pix sixth, they will be picking to address a problem area, that can't be qualified as a failure. I honestly thought the Redskins were going to be able to drop but I'm pessimistic about it now.

This article by our beloved Peter King details why trading down is almost impossible now.

Some highlights:

Myth of the Month: If a team near the top of the first round of the NFL Draft wants to trade down, it can get a ransom for the pick.

Reality of the Month: In the last two NFL Drafts, no team with a top-10 pick in the first round has traded down for said ransom. In fact, the last two drafts have yielded only one trade with a team in the top 10, but it wasn't a trade-down. It was the Raiders trading the seventh overall pick plus linebacker Napoleon Harris for Randy Moss in 2005; Minnesota chose wideout Troy Williamson with that pick. (Talk about a trade that hurt both teams.)



Making an error by trading up can hurt a team's salary-cap situation and future drafts more than ever. Say a team trades up to the third pick in the draft this year, nabs Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn and guarantees him $20 million -- which is about the amount of guaranteed money the No. 3 overall pick will get. And imagine if Quinn is awful. Contracts can be written with different cap impacts, but suffice it to say, the big guarantee is going to be a Ryan Leaf-type weight on your franchise if Quinn has to be cut after three years at the cost of a $10 million cap hit. Never mind losing the picks it took to get Quinn in the first place. It used to be, when the guarantees were one-third of what they are now, that teams wouldn't fear the cap hit so much. "The cash mistake is bad enough when you blow a high pick,'' Peterson said. "But the cap mistake is worse. And then missing out on the future picks just compounds it.''


"What's so interesting about the draft,'' said Peterson, "is that the risk-reward ratio is so much different between the top 10 and the picks you make as you go lower in the draft. You find out how hard it is to say good-bye to players in the top 10 of a draft. That's why you don't see the trades you used to see.''



Peterson is Karl Peterson, President of the KC Chiefs.

This is very common sense; you guarentee SO much money to the top picks, they almost have to pan out. And one thing we know about the draft...it's a giant crapshoot.
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Post by fleetus »

ESPN just had their draft preview for the Redskins. They acknowledged that we've given away too many picks on previous deals and need to try and trade down to get some of those picks back. They also covered the fact that we have a poor pass rush and need to consider a DL at #6. In the end however, Kiper said we should not pass up Laron Landry to pair him with ST at safety. Interesting.
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Post by SkinsJock »

IMO Nothing that Kiper thinks we should do should even be considered :wink: Fortunately for the Redskins - Gibbs and co. do not listen to me OR Kiper :lol: This guy would love us to follow his advice and have it not work out for us which is what would happen.

Landry might be great at #6 but hopefully that will be because another team takes him - I would be very surprised if we take Landry instead of some of the other players who are more likely to be able to help our team better than another super secondary player, who will need a lot of time to be effective.
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Post by fleetus »

Landry isn't my first choice either. However, most experts agree DL is probably the position which takes longest to develop, on average, after QB. So the length of development factor when comparing DB's and DL probably favors Landry.

My ooposition to Kipers suggestion would be two fold:

1. ST needs a veteran leader who knows the defense back there with him, as evidenced last year when Prioleau was lost and ST floundered.

2. We need DL depth, run stopping and pass rush help more than a SS to pair with ST. In fact. I would predict that if we drafted Landry, he might not start most of the season because he would need to learn the system and Prioleau is no slouch.
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Post by HardDawg »

Take Okoye or Adams and trade Vinny C for the "Mr Irrelevant" pick!
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Post by HEROHAMO »

SkinsFreak wrote:
HEROHAMO wrote:If we pick up just one player at no.6 then this draft IMHO will have been a failure.


A failure? I don't agree with that at all.

Go to Redskins.com and listen to Gibbs' press conference from today. Joe said that "if you guessed you were going to move back, it rarely happens." He went on to say that moving up IS something that you control over, but in all, it's hard to make a move there. He basically said that he just figures they will pick at #6 but are preparing in case something does come along.

So I don't think it would be fair to call it a "failure" if they can't move back. Too many things that are out of their control will have to happen if they want to trade down.
No. I disagree.

Out of there control? Why? They have plenty of time to wheel and deal to make something happen.

They managed to trade away all our picks in previous years so I say start making up for it. There is no reason we cant trade away our no.6 for a late first round pick and pick up a second round pick.

It is very possible and I dont buy into "Its out of their control". Plenty of teams have traded down before we should make it happen again. There are plenty of teams to make offers to, plenty of chances to trade down. I say make it happen. I am tired of the excuses and demand this front office to make it happen.

As a fan I am not asking for the impossible. I am hoping for the possible.

There is no reason why we cant trade down. Many teams in the NfL. Thus many oppurtunities. I say Seize the moment.

Fellas its time to start demanding more from our front office.

No more settling for mediocre moves and demanding excellence.
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Post by SkinsFreak »

HEROHAMO wrote:There is no reason why we cant trade down. Many teams in the NfL. Thus many oppurtunities. I say Seize the moment.


Rather then me explaining all the reasons why the Skins have little control over other teams trading up, as many of us already have, perhaps in a subsequent post we could hear some examples of how the Skins could force another team to trade up? The fact is that over the past several years, these types of trades are few and far between.

From another thread:

Fios wrote:
Agreed, the Redskins ability to trade down is contingent on the decisions of the five teams picking ahead of them. Millen seems to think he's addressed the Lions offensive line woes, that doesn't bode well for the Redskins' chances of trading down. If Peterson, Quinn or Thomas should drop to the sixth slot, the Redskins can slide down. (I'm not even entertaining the notion that Johnson will still be there.) If those guys all go beforehand, the Redskins will probably be picking sixth. And even if they do pix sixth, they will be picking to address a problem area, that can't be qualified as a failure. I honestly thought the Redskins were going to be able to drop but I'm pessimistic about it now.

This article by our beloved Peter King details why trading down is almost impossible now.

Some highlights:

Quote:
Myth of the Month: If a team near the top of the first round of the NFL Draft wants to trade down, it can get a ransom for the pick.

Reality of the Month: In the last two NFL Drafts, no team with a top-10 pick in the first round has traded down for said ransom. In fact, the last two drafts have yielded only one trade with a team in the top 10, but it wasn't a trade-down. It was the Raiders trading the seventh overall pick plus linebacker Napoleon Harris for Randy Moss in 2005; Minnesota chose wideout Troy Williamson with that pick. (Talk about a trade that hurt both teams.)




Quote:
Making an error by trading up can hurt a team's salary-cap situation and future drafts more than ever. Say a team trades up to the third pick in the draft this year, nabs Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn and guarantees him $20 million -- which is about the amount of guaranteed money the No. 3 overall pick will get. And imagine if Quinn is awful. Contracts can be written with different cap impacts, but suffice it to say, the big guarantee is going to be a Ryan Leaf-type weight on your franchise if Quinn has to be cut after three years at the cost of a $10 million cap hit. Never mind losing the picks it took to get Quinn in the first place. It used to be, when the guarantees were one-third of what they are now, that teams wouldn't fear the cap hit so much. "The cash mistake is bad enough when you blow a high pick,'' Peterson said. "But the cap mistake is worse. And then missing out on the future picks just compounds it.''



Quote:
"What's so interesting about the draft,'' said Peterson, "is that the risk-reward ratio is so much different between the top 10 and the picks you make as you go lower in the draft. You find out how hard it is to say good-bye to players in the top 10 of a draft. That's why you don't see the trades you used to see.''




Peterson is Karl Peterson, President of the KC Chiefs.

This is very common sense; you guarentee SO much money to the top picks, they almost have to pan out. And one thing we know about the draft...it's a giant crapshoot.


:wink: Hope that helps!

HEROHAMO wrote:Fellas its time to start demanding more from our front office.


I hear ya! In your opinion, how should we go about that?
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Post by PulpExposure »

HEROHAMO wrote:They managed to trade away all our picks in previous years so I say start making up for it. There is no reason we cant trade away our no.6 for a late first round pick and pick up a second round pick.


It's not that easy. This is regarded as a relatively weak draft. If there were a lot of people worth trading up to get our pick, then we'd have leverage. As it is, there aren't. So we don't have a lot of leverage...

One executive I spoke with -- a smart football man whom I trust very much -- said his team gave only 18 players first-round grades in its recently concluded draft meetings. That means, as he said, a bunch of second-round-quality players (at least, in this team's view) will be drafted between the middle and end of the first round, and they will make more money than players with holes deserve to make. "I bet you'll see plenty of teams in the mid- to low-first-round trying to trade down, and I bet they'll have a lot of trouble finding trading partners,'' this personnel guy said.

And I don't recall hearing this many questions about top picks in a while.

"The top of this draft board is so weak,'' one top scout said. "Guys will be handed money who haven't done nearly enough to deserve it.''


Just today from Peter King. Before you throw out the "It's Peter King" card, remember he's just relating what a football exec and a scout are telling him.

Last week he wrote about trading down: Here

Myth of the Month: If a team near the top of the first round of the NFL Draft wants to trade down, it can get a ransom for the pick.

Reality of the Month: In the last two NFL Drafts, no team with a top-10 pick in the first round has traded down for said ransom. In fact, the last two drafts have yielded only one trade with a team in the top 10, but it wasn't a trade-down. It was the Raiders trading the seventh overall pick plus linebacker Napoleon Harris for Randy Moss in 2005; Minnesota chose wideout Troy Williamson with that pick. (Talk about a trade that hurt both teams.)

"It's too difficult,'' Chiefs president Carl Peterson said in his office the other day. "You've got a lot of teams that want to get rich by trading down, but nobody wants to trade up.''

Making an error by trading up can hurt a team's salary-cap situation and future drafts more than ever. Say a team trades up to the third pick in the draft this year, nabs Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn and guarantees him $20 million -- which is about the amount of guaranteed money the No. 3 overall pick will get. And imagine if Quinn is awful. Contracts can be written with different cap impacts, but suffice it to say, the big guarantee is going to be a Ryan Leaf-type weight on your franchise if Quinn has to be cut after three years at the cost of a $10 million cap hit. Never mind losing the picks it took to get Quinn in the first place. It used to be, when the guarantees were one-third of what they are now, that teams wouldn't fear the cap hit so much. "The cash mistake is bad enough when you blow a high pick,'' Peterson said. "But the cap mistake is worse. And then missing out on the future picks just compounds it.''



While I may not trust Peter King completely, I tend to give Carl Peterson a good measure of respect.
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Post by fleetus »

I read the post about how difficult trading down is. It is a valid point. I think that draft pick value chart exagerates the value of the top few picks. Every year is a different pool of talent. The year Tim Couch was drafted first (or Alex Smith a few years ago) shouldn't be compared equally with the year Peyton Manning went first or Michael Vick for that matter.


Anyway, I have to amend my answer to the original question, What would you do if you were GM.

I would:

1. Make Snyder promise that my final say in player personnel matters was indeed final, with no meddling from him. If I'm fired beause those decisions didn't pan out fine, but not because Snyder wanted me to trade away the first round pick for yet another over-valued free agent.

2. Draft Okoye with the 6th pick. I've always thought he was worth the #6, but thought we could trade down and still get him between 8-12. His value is on the way up. I don't think we could trade down any farther than 8 and still have a shot at him. I think he has moved up to be one of the top 6 players and is worthy of us staying put at 6 to draft him.

3. Draft late or sign a rookie free agent kicker who could seriously compete with Suisham.

4. Fire Cerrato after the draft.

5. Give the Skins capologist a much deserved raise and vacation.

6. Talk to Joe Gibbs about a weekly award to be given to whichever Redskin player best demonstrated team qualities, unselfishness and work ethic. This could be a cash bonus and/or priviledges as reward. Anything from a guy who was amazing at impersonating an opposing player on the scout team, to making several great wedge busts on STeams, to an offensive lineman who subbed in and gave up no sacks to a guy who played hurt. Accentuate the guys who are the glue that hold this team together.
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Post by everydayAskinsday »

fleetus wrote:Landry isn't my first choice either. However, most experts agree DL is probably the position which takes longest to develop, on average, after QB. So the length of development factor when comparing DB's and DL probably favors Landry.

My ooposition to Kipers suggestion would be two fold:

1. ST needs a veteran leader who knows the defense back there with him, as evidenced last year when Prioleau was lost and ST floundered.

2. We need DL depth, run stopping and pass rush help more than a SS to pair with ST. In fact. I would predict that if we drafted Landry, he might not start most of the season because he would need to learn the system and Prioleau is no slouch.


If Sean still needs a veteran back there teaching him this defense in year 4 then we are in trouble.. if hes supposed to be the an elite safety then he should no longer need a veteran to hold his hand.. he needs to be used in the same manner as Reed & Williams.. they both play closer to the line and have deep help so they can make more plays.. This is where Landry would fit in(although it might take him the season to get comfortable.. but that is where we use the veterans .NOT to hold ST's hand).. he would definetly not be brought in to play SS he would be used as a FS moving Taylor to the SS but most teams dont even use safetys in that sense anymore.. what we need to do is sit down and study how the Ravens and Cowboys use there stud safeties and follow suit ..I know we need DL help but our D-Line if it can stay healthy and I know thats a BIG IF wont kill us for one more year and we can add depth later in the draft.. there are productive DL men beyond the 1st 3 rounds.. the Bears rook Anderson had 12 sacks last year and he was a 5th round pick up.. its easier to find a solid DL player then secondary help in my opnion.. suring up our secondary for years to come would be a great help to this D
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Post by HEROHAMO »

SkinsFreak wrote:
HEROHAMO wrote:There is no reason why we cant trade down. Many teams in the NfL. Thus many oppurtunities. I say Seize the moment.


Rather then me explaining all the reasons why the Skins have little control over other teams trading up, as many of us already have, perhaps in a subsequent post we could hear some examples of how the Skins could force another team to trade up? The fact is that over the past several years, these types of trades are few and far between.

From another thread:

Fios wrote:
Agreed, the Redskins ability to trade down is contingent on the decisions of the five teams picking ahead of them. Millen seems to think he's addressed the Lions offensive line woes, that doesn't bode well for the Redskins' chances of trading down. If Peterson, Quinn or Thomas should drop to the sixth slot, the Redskins can slide down. (I'm not even entertaining the notion that Johnson will still be there.) If those guys all go beforehand, the Redskins will probably be picking sixth. And even if they do pix sixth, they will be picking to address a problem area, that can't be qualified as a failure. I honestly thought the Redskins were going to be able to drop but I'm pessimistic about it now.

This article by our beloved Peter King details why trading down is almost impossible now.

Some highlights:

Quote:
Myth of the Month: If a team near the top of the first round of the NFL Draft wants to trade down, it can get a ransom for the pick.

Reality of the Month: In the last two NFL Drafts, no team with a top-10 pick in the first round has traded down for said ransom. In fact, the last two drafts have yielded only one trade with a team in the top 10, but it wasn't a trade-down. It was the Raiders trading the seventh overall pick plus linebacker Napoleon Harris for Randy Moss in 2005; Minnesota chose wideout Troy Williamson with that pick. (Talk about a trade that hurt both teams.)




Quote:
Making an error by trading up can hurt a team's salary-cap situation and future drafts more than ever. Say a team trades up to the third pick in the draft this year, nabs Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn and guarantees him $20 million -- which is about the amount of guaranteed money the No. 3 overall pick will get. And imagine if Quinn is awful. Contracts can be written with different cap impacts, but suffice it to say, the big guarantee is going to be a Ryan Leaf-type weight on your franchise if Quinn has to be cut after three years at the cost of a $10 million cap hit. Never mind losing the picks it took to get Quinn in the first place. It used to be, when the guarantees were one-third of what they are now, that teams wouldn't fear the cap hit so much. "The cash mistake is bad enough when you blow a high pick,'' Peterson said. "But the cap mistake is worse. And then missing out on the future picks just compounds it.''



Quote:
"What's so interesting about the draft,'' said Peterson, "is that the risk-reward ratio is so much different between the top 10 and the picks you make as you go lower in the draft. You find out how hard it is to say good-bye to players in the top 10 of a draft. That's why you don't see the trades you used to see.''




Peterson is Karl Peterson, President of the KC Chiefs.

This is very common sense; you guarentee SO much money to the top picks, they almost have to pan out. And one thing we know about the draft...it's a giant crapshoot.


:wink: Hope that helps!

HEROHAMO wrote:Fellas its time to start demanding more from our front office.


I hear ya! In your opinion, how should we go about that?
First off this Vinny C. Fella has no real say. He is just a puppett having his strings pulled by D. Snyder.

Bringing Gibbs back was certainly a good move.

We really need to get a Jerry West type team President.

I can say this much if Jerry West were our team president he could make a trade down happen. I guarantee it.

So I say this. Nothing is impossible right? So why not make it happen.




My main point. We should really key in on trading up to number 2.
Even if we have to give away Marshall, Springs,our no.6 and next years first pick.

At no.2 we will either have a shot at Russell or C. Johnson.

IF Johnson is available there are a number of teams who will give up alot for C.J.

With 32 teams in the league. That means we have 31 teams who we can potentially make a deal with.

1.Tampa Bay
I offer tampa Bay C.J. for there no.4 pick, and both there second round picks and theyre third round pick.
2. Atlanta
Everyone knows Atlanta really needs a WR. I offer Atlanta same deal, trade spots in first round, and both there second round picks, and there third round pick.
3. Green Bay
Farve really needs another wideout along side Donald Driver.
I offer Green Bay to trade spots in the first and there 2nd,3rd and next years first round pick.
4. New England
I offer New England C.J. for both there first round picks and theyre second round pick.
5. ???

Lets say Tampa counter offers there no.4 pick and just both there second round picks.

With the no. 4 pick I take Laron Landry, the second round picks will go to DE,DT.

Or with no.4 pick I take Gaines Adams, Second Round pick Merriwheter, other second round pick DT.
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Post by fleetus »

I disagree about trading up to #2. I see your logic. CJ and Russell are the top 2 most coveted players. For that very reason though, the price required to trade up will be high. Just for arguments sake, lets say we can strike a deal like you propose:

#6, 2008 1st rd, Marshall and Springs for #2

A few things will result, IMO.

Our CB situation will be below average without Springs. Losing Springs will affect our wins column more than what CJ will provide us a #2 rookie WR.

If we use the #2 to trade down, I'm not sure we'll get all of that value back. I mean, if Detroit's best trade partner is US, then how are we going to find a significantly better deal to trade down from #2???

Maybe most importantly, we would YET AGAIN, be mortgaging future draft picks. We've been playing this credit card game for a few yeaqrs where we gamble future picks away to try and find the "missing piece" for this season. I think we've proven that in these gambles, the HOUSE usually wins. We need to keep our picks and develop some of our own talent. The few draft picks we have kept are not so bad:

Sean Taylor
Chris Cooley
Ladell Betts
Jason Campbell
Kedrick Golston
Rocky McIntosh TBD
Carlos Rogers TBD

as opposed to the players we've traded draft picks for:

TJ Duckett
Brandon Lloyd
Portis
Brunell
Laverneas Coles
Chad Morton

out of that group, would say Portis is the lone success. Some could argue that if we'd kept Bailey instead of trading him away plus our 2nd round pick, that Betts would have developed into a fine starting RB. With the 2nd round pick we sent to Denver, they drafted Tatum Bell. So which would you rather have? Tatum Bell/Betts AND Bailey OR Portis/Betts?

Anyway, hindsight is 20/20. Just trying to point out that these gambles seem to be somewhat low percentage successes. The draft allows you to pay less for a player initially, groom them into your system, putting them in backup roles for depth and allow them to PROVE their worth to you BEFORE paying them a ransom.

Not saying a trade up cannot work. Just that it would be very tricky to get proper value out of it.
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Post by PulpExposure »

fleetus wrote:If we use the #2 to trade down, I'm not sure we'll get all of that value back. I mean, if Detroit's best trade partner is US, then how are we going to find a significantly better deal to trade down from #2???


HEROHAMO is going by the philosophy that we'll somehow get a better deal out of the #2 pick than Detroit will. Even taking into account what we give up to move up to that point.

That, my friend, is called fantasy.
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Post by HEROHAMO »

PulpExposure wrote:
fleetus wrote:If we use the #2 to trade down, I'm not sure we'll get all of that value back. I mean, if Detroit's best trade partner is US, then how are we going to find a significantly better deal to trade down from #2???


HEROHAMO is going by the philosophy that we'll somehow get a better deal out of the #2 pick than Detroit will. Even taking into account what we give up to move up to that point.

That, my friend, is called fantasy.
We are talking about Matt Millen! He has the potential to pull of a dumb move at any time.

I am saying make the offer. Heck make the offer to Oakland as well.

Who knows they might say yes? Instead of assuming what will not work.

All I am saying is make the offer. I would be happy if we made the offer and the team declined at least I know that we are exploring every possibility. There is nothing unrealistic about it.
Sean Taylor starting free safety Heavens team!

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Post by HEROHAMO »

fleetus wrote:I disagree about trading up to #2. I see your logic. CJ and Russell are the top 2 most coveted players. For that very reason though, the price required to trade up will be high. Just for arguments sake, lets say we can strike a deal like you propose:

#6, 2008 1st rd, Marshall and Springs for #2

A few things will result, IMO.

Our CB situation will be below average without Springs. Losing Springs will affect our wins column more than what CJ will provide us a #2 rookie WR.

If we use the #2 to trade down, I'm not sure we'll get all of that value back. I mean, if Detroit's best trade partner is US, then how are we going to find a significantly better deal to trade down from #2???

Maybe most importantly, we would YET AGAIN, be mortgaging future draft picks. We've been playing this credit card game for a few yeaqrs where we gamble future picks away to try and find the "missing piece" for this season. I think we've proven that in these gambles, the HOUSE usually wins. We need to keep our picks and develop some of our own talent. The few draft picks we have kept are not so bad:

Sean Taylor
Chris Cooley
Ladell Betts
Jason Campbell
Kedrick Golston
Rocky McIntosh TBD
Carlos Rogers TBD

as opposed to the players we've traded draft picks for:

TJ Duckett
Brandon Lloyd
Portis
Brunell
Laverneas Coles
Chad Morton

out of that group, would say Portis is the lone success. Some could argue that if we'd kept Bailey instead of trading him away plus our 2nd round pick, that Betts would have developed into a fine starting RB. With the 2nd round pick we sent to Denver, they drafted Tatum Bell. So which would you rather have? Tatum Bell/Betts AND Bailey OR Portis/Betts?

Anyway, hindsight is 20/20. Just trying to point out that these gambles seem to be somewhat low percentage successes. The draft allows you to pay less for a player initially, groom them into your system, putting them in backup roles for depth and allow them to PROVE their worth to you BEFORE paying them a ransom.

Not saying a trade up cannot work. Just that it would be very tricky to get proper value out of it.
You make very valid points. In which make perfect sense.

The thing is we where trading away draft picks for overhyped players.

This time we are trading away two older players and two draft picks, for other draft picks.

Lets say we aquire the no.2, I guarantee Atlanta would be drooling at the oppurtunity to get there hands on Calvin J.

I am positive they would trade spots and give up both there second rounders.

Or at the least there first round, then one of there second round picks and a third round pick. That would still be worth the trade.

We could pick up 3 very solid starters on our defense.

All we need to solidy the Dline would be two solid players.

Also drafting Landry with the first pick would solidy our Secondary.
Sean Taylor starting free safety Heavens team!

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