Rich-League Officer wrote:James, you are going to have to make a more convincing argument about hiding rookie pots
The idea that everyone (NFL) know the players potential is silly and inaccurate.
The NFL draft is one of the most inexact sciences in sports.
There are 10-20 undrafted players per team on NFL rosters today.
The PNFL has (if I counted correctly) 49 total players, all of whom are filler.
And, btw, 15 of those are your team alone.
So, 17 teams have 34 or 2 per team.
Why?
Because we know every players potential and nobody makes mistakes.
If you hate the idea because you don't want to be wrong, admit it.
If you get the #1 pick in the draft and there are 2 WRs sitting there and they look similar in actuals but both their pots say this:
A-A-A-B-A-A-A-A
you are afraid that one player might be :
83-85-90-63-95-95-95
the other could be:
84-86-91-64-96-96-96
And if you pick the wrong one, it would sting
As a coach I might not love this either but its reality of the NFL draft.
How does Trevor Lawrence look today?
We were all told he was a can't miss generational talent....hmmm, not so much yet.
At least admit you hate it for selfish reasons
I think it's a gimmick the flaws in a real NFL are known are a calculated choice. You know up and down side and you playing the odds. Is Lawrence a Lawrence issue or coaching and supporting player issue? People forget there were concerns about how little he player among other things.
If you really think NFL scouts don't know the in and out of these players you are mistaken. The draft isn't a crap shoot. It is a risk reward thing. You don't think Niner's coaching staff want Mac Jones over Trey Lance. Could you imagine how good Mac Jones would be as a Niner?
It isn't afraid of it. It's a stupid gimmick. We don't have issues because there isn't person issue, coaching issues etc. I even suggested something that would be an informed boost or drop tied to a player which would be harsher than this. It isn't me who is afraid of randomness. It is hiding informtation that would be known.