I go back and forth on this, but understand what
@The Human Q-Tip is saying.
From a 30,000ft view, every draft gives a team a
theoretical chance to add 7 players of varying skills and talent levels. Each team gets to add a pick in each of the 7 rounds. If, again in theory, 4 of those picks work out each year, then as long as you hit on 4 picks, you've had a good draft. Where
@The Human Q-Tip is coming from is not being OK with a "good" draft, but wanting to hit on more draft picks than average. Every swing (draft pick) is a chance to hit a home run. The more swings, especially in the front of the draft, the better the odds to hit a home run.
All that explaining and I haven't decided which side I'm leaning toward.