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Dale Roberts's avatar

As Joe says, a little bad luck can change things quickly. If Geno breaks his leg in the last game of the season it obviously elevates QB as a draft need. If Metcalf re-injures his neck, if K9 blows out his knee, if Nwosu breaks his foot... on and on. My point is that we're not blessed with great depth which means that a bad break could force our draft strategy. Otherwise we'll be free to take the best player available at the most valuable positions. There are six defensive tackles and edge rushers currently ranked in the top 15 by most services 3 more in the first round. Quentin Johnston, Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Jordan Addison, and Kayshon Boutte are the only recievers consistently give a first round grade but which of them deserve to be in the top 15 varies wildly. The top three QBs and top six defensive line/edge guys are pretty consistent. I'm still leaning toward defense for our top pick and if one of those four WRs drops to our second pick then that seems like a good value. However, if we lucked into Jalen Carter and top 15 edge was available with our second pick, I think that would have a larger impact and be less available in subsequent rounds than WR.

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AggieHawk's avatar

Thank you, Kenneth. I'm laying out the following for my own sake, so forgive me if this is too rudimentary:

1. Receivers have increased in importance over the last decade of the NFL, and no team can get by with (ahem) pedestrian players at the position.

2. The number of receivers in a typical offensive set has increased over the last several decades, with three and four-WR sets common.

3. Receivers are subject (like running backs) to serious injuries.

4. The receiving position typically takes a lot of time to develop, with some players notably "getting it" just as their rookie contracts expire.

5. Highly-drafted receivers, and middling-drafted receivers, have erratic "hit rates" as draft successes.

All of this combined makes the issue of receiving a difficult problem for any front office. Even if 1 and 2 above are slightly less applicable to Seattle (and that's very debatable), 3, 4, and 5 apply to the Seahawks just as with any other team. An added problem with Seattle is that the offense seems to function at its best when a lot of players get touches in the pass game. This seemed to be true with Russ as well as with Geno.

I guess I'd be inclined to take a great prospect early, but we do have to be cognizant that he might not become Julio Jones. He might become Koren Robinson. Or maybe Peter Warrick (remember him?)

I wonder if the above facts might suggest that the team should consider (shudder) trading down to acquire more picks, and grab more players in the mid-round area. More Dareke Youngs, in other words (Darrell Jackson was not highly drafted either--and yes I know hit rates will drop the later one drafts no matter the position). Or that the team should pick up players in free agency whom they think could be WR2s but have only been WR3 or WR4 in a deep offense and thus won't break the bank.

There's no easy solution, in other words. A high pick on WR would be wonderful if it works, or create another load of vitriol if it doesn't.

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