Triplethreat
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Find a kicker and we’re in business.
York will be back... that much is certain.
Find a kicker and we’re in business.
Can you show me this data?
I haven't seen it and would like to.
Sure.
Over the Cap did the original research and the 33rd team (see links below) compiled a lot of that research into a three part series.
1st round picks: 30% get a 2nd contract with their original team
2nd round picks: 23% get a 2nd contract with their original team
3rd round picks: 18% get a 2nd contract with their original team
4th round picks: 13% get a 2nd contract with their original team
So you start getting into probabilities...
The Browns traded 44 (23% hit rate) for 68 (18% hit rate), 108 (13% hit rate) and 124 (13% hit rate).
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 1 — Round by Round
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 1...The Los Angeles Rams were this year's Super Bowl winners and have largely...www.the33rdteam.com
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 2 — Positional Value
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 2...WR and CB picks look to be very solid for first round selections. Both are considered to be...www.the33rdteam.com
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 3 — Late-Round vs. Early-Next Round
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 3...In this year's draft, many teams have several early picks in round one...www.the33rdteam.com
Long articles, but a lot of really good info.
He’ll be cut this year. We don’t have time to be missing kicks. He won’t cost us any games because after he misses two in the row you cut him before he does.York will be back... that much is certain.
You are forgetting that those numbers are all skewed by Browns draft picks, so the % that succeed as long as they aren't drafted by Cleveland is probably higher. The thing that concerns me is that he was demanding a trade in his 2nd year, that kind of premadonna shit may become an issue if Watson develops a repoire with Coop and Njoku.That doesn't really prove the quality of the player at all.
1st and 2nd round picks have to be much more likely to be studs than the rest, which are likely depth players.
"Second contract with original team" is a pretty rough metric to go by. If I had all the data, that isn't the column I'd choose to use.Sure.
Over the Cap did the original research and the 33rd team (see links below) compiled a lot of that research into a three part series.
1st round picks: 30% get a 2nd contract with their original team
2nd round picks: 23% get a 2nd contract with their original team
3rd round picks: 18% get a 2nd contract with their original team
4th round picks: 13% get a 2nd contract with their original team
So you start getting into probabilities...
The Browns traded 44 (23% hit rate) for 68 (18% hit rate), 108 (13% hit rate) and 124 (13% hit rate).
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 1 — Round by Round
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 1...The Los Angeles Rams were this year's Super Bowl winners and have largely...www.the33rdteam.com
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 2 — Positional Value
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 2...WR and CB picks look to be very solid for first round selections. Both are considered to be...www.the33rdteam.com
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 3 — Late-Round vs. Early-Next Round
The Hidden Reality of Draft Value: Part 3...In this year's draft, many teams have several early picks in round one...www.the33rdteam.com
Long articles, but a lot of really good info.
I love that you posted this.
Matt Harmon's Reception Perception is the best thing out there for analysis of wide receivers. He watches every single snap these guys take.
He's definitely not always right, but he puts in more work than anyone else at this very specific niche.
His analysis of wide receivers is what PFF should strive to be.
Mind releasing him before he presses charges?Locked up a #1 receiver here.
You just lack every bit of nuance in every post, don't you?
The point of the draft chart isn't to follow it as if it were the bible. It's to spot inefficiency, not use it literally.
That doesn't really prove the quality of the player at all.
1st and 2nd round picks have to be much more likely to be studs than the rest, which are likely depth players.
I'd have to imagine more 1st overall picks than not are QBs, and even if they're bad are given at least a little while to play and see if they develop. Probably skews the numbers quite a bit. But I'm just speculating, I didn't actually look anything up.1st round picks for sure, what is interesting is the percent of starters in the 1st round almost doesnt matter where you are picked, like 51% in the first 15 picks and 49% in the last. Stat is a bit old, but intersing
One thing though is the 1st overall pick does end up being a starter much more than any other spot, but outside of 1st overall, its a crap shoot at about the same percentage.