BnGhog wrote:
I think tooooo much emphasis has been put on the bad moves. Every team has bad moves. Like the AA move. But it you really break it down into what was suppose to be at the time.... He was, is and never will be a cover guy. He was brought in for more run support. Tayler by himself could play center fielder and cover. But AA ended up being used to cover. If had been used correctly he simply would have been ok and would have been a little over paid. But sense he wasn't and it didn't work out ( here is that hind site is 20/20 thing agian) it was a very bad move.
That is such nonsense. No, every team does not make AA moves. Your statement itself proves my point. Why would the Redskins pick a FA safety that can't cover, pay him the largest salary ever given to a Safety, and then expect him to do what he can't do? Did the Redskins not know what defense they run? Please. Fact is, Chicago doesn't seem to be using him "properly" either, which fortunately puts the Skins in second place in the "I'm an idiot for picking Adam Archuletta" contest. And as idiotic as the Redskins were, Chicago proves that there is a sucker born every minute.
BnGhog wrote: Peaple always remember your bad moves and not the good ones. They have to have a 53 man roster every year. You state you can think of a dozen off the top of your head in 4 years. Thats 12 bad moves out of a 53 man roster times 4 years that's 212 decisions that had to be made weather to keep, trade, draft, or cut. That's what like 6% was bad moves. That's 94% good moves. I would say that is a passing grade.
Ridiculous analogy or figuring or whatever you call this. Teams do not make 53 man roster changes every year do they? NO THEY DO NOT. Rebuilding teams probably don't change their roster more that a dozen players, and the Redskins were not rebuilding. They were improving on a core group.
And I was referring to FA moves, where you should be almost 100%, and surely 90%. That's why teams sometimes trade 1st round picks for experienced (proven) FA because it is supposed to remove the risk. You expect the proven player to perform because he's already proven that ability.
And you certainly don't let a proven starter leave in order to sign a replacement that you have to pay three times more who winds up being benched for lack of performance.
You don't let your MLB (the QB of your defense) leave and go to a division rival. You don't trade draft picks for a player (TJ Ducket) that is never used. You don't trade picks for a player (Lloyd) and give him a huge new contract (when he was already under contract) before he plays a down. You don't do these things and say, OH well, win some you lose some.
Too much emphasis on bad moves? No. Not enough emphasis apparently, because they did it every year for the first three years.
Letting Smoot go the very next year after we traded away Bailey. Bad move.
Letting Harris go on top of it....and bringing in Kenny Wright and the other guy, neither of which could cover my grandmother, while Harris was one of the leaders in interceptions the next year (with another team).
Picking Rodgers with a #1 pick. At best, he was a 3rd, or plays that way.
Letting Clark go and replacing him with Archuletta.
Letting Peirce go and replacing him with Marshall who didn't make it as a MLB
And that's just on defense in three years and why we went from 3rd in the NFL in 2004 to 31st in 2006
Then we have Brunell who we gave up picks for. We paid too much for Portis (getting Portis wasn't a bad move, but Denver got the better of us on the deal. Bailey was certainly worth a straight up trade without having to include picks too.
We give up picks and big money for Lloyd...a total bust.
Duckett, total bust and wasted picks
ARE marginal, but no great success story like Moss.
We pick up Caldwell, and Mcardell and don't bother using them for half a season even though all of our starters were limping.
That's just off the top of my head, and I bet someone could point out a few more.
You think this is even remotely close to success? It's barely 50% on FA !!!
So it was good that the Redskins stayed away from the FA market this year. They couldn't afford anymore of that nonsense and still field a team.
This year it seems that someone was paying attention and worked to retain our core players and simply added potential talent via the draft.
So I think Vinny/Snyder did a decent job which could, if we're lucky, turn out to be a great job if our picks turn out to be solid players. And you just never know....Colt Brennan (though a long shot) could turn out to be the steal of the century a couple of year down the road.
Again, only time will tell.