My 7 biggest draft misses as an evaluator and the lessons learned from them

Draft Wire’s Jeff Risdon looks back at the 7 biggest misses in his draft evaluations over the last 20 years and what he learned from them

Recently I reflected upon the top-graded players at each position in my draft evaluations since 2004. That was a fun exercise.

This trip down memory lane is not so pleasant. But it’s an important one nonetheless.

Who were my biggest misses in the draft evaluation process?

Most of these are players who I expected to be very good in the NFL but didn’t pan out. There are a couple of notable prospects where I grossly underestimated their impact at the next level, too.

The point here is to learn from the misses. Why were my evaluations off? What did I think I saw that made me miss? If you’re not trying to get better and learn from your mistakes as an evaluator, you’re destined to keep missing.

Report: The Shrine Bowl is headed to Texas for 2024

A report from Brett McMurphy indicates the Shrine Bowl is moving to the Dallas Cowboys training facility in Frisco, Texas

One of the most prominent postseason showcase games is on the move again. The Shrine Bowl is relocating to Frisco, Texas for the 2024 edition of the longstanding pre-draft event. A report from Brett McMurphy via the Action Network indicated the move is happening, placing the game at “The Star”, the Cowboys’ training facility.

The game, also known as the East-West Game, has been held in Las Vegas for the last two years. Prior to that, it spent many years in St. Petersburg, Florida.

The Shrine Bowl and Senior Bowl feature the largest collection of NFL draft prospects who have completed their senior seasons or graduated already from the college ranks. Among the notable Shrine Bowl alums in the 2023 NFL draft are first-round wideout Zay Flowers and kicker Jake Moody, who was selected in the third round.

The top-graded draft prospects at each position since 2004

Draft Wire’s Jeff Risdon reveals his top-graded draft prospects at each position since 2004

On a recent radio appearance, I was asked an intriguing question.

“Who was the best prospect you’ve ever graded?”

I’ve been evaluating prospects and covering the NFL draft professionally since 2004, which meant the 2023 draft was my 20th. The question and the timeframe was a nice catalyst to go back and examine some of the older evaluations.

To answer the question directly, my highest-graded player ever was Wisconsin OT Joe Thomas in 2007. The grading scales and systems I use have changed over the years, but Thomas topped any iteration.

Here are the top-graded players from my evaluations at each position since the 2004 NFL draft.

How a Beastie Boys song can help the NFL scout LB prospects better

The NFL keeps looking for the wrong things in 1st-round LBs, but heeding a Beastie Boys song could help them evaluate them better

Here’s a little story I’ve got to tell about drafting linebackers in the NFL…

NFL teams haven’t established a great track record in evaluating first-round linebackers lately. A quick check of the recent decline in all fifth-year options for first-round LBs in the 2020 draft shows the league still struggles to get linebacker scouting correct.

My good friend Ash Thompson recorded an outstanding video breakdown on this whole topic for the Detroit Lions Podcast, in the context of evaluating 2023 first-rounder Jack Campbell. In chatting with Thompson privately, I was reminded of both an old song and something I’ve learned about linebacking play over the years.

Hold it now, hit it

The Beastie Boys and their “License to Ill” album was part of the deep-rooted soundtrack of my high school years. There’s a lesser-known track mixed among the epic songs, one that’s been a phrase I’ve adopted over the years to help me sort out my linebacker evaluations. It’ss the lead track on the album as well as a guiding light in LB scouting.

“Hold it now, hit it”

In linebacking terms, it means being positionally disciplined while also having enough athleticism to react quickly enough to make the play. Intelligence and body control matter as much–if not more–than straight-line speed and hyperkinetic energy. Hold your ground, don’t get fooled, then strike and terminate the play with a hit.

In his video, Thompson highlighted one-time Lions first-rounder Jarrad Davis, who is a great example of where the NFL gets evaluations at LB all wrong. Davis is a special athlete, a big-fast-strong-twitchy athlete, the kind of guy you want leading the charge to fight for the right to party. Alas, that doesn’t make him a very good linebacker.

Davis is far from the only linebacker where the NFL was looking for the new style in the wrong places. 2020 first-rounder Isaiah Simmons is another great example of a tremendous athlete who didn’t actually play off-ball linebacker all that effectively in college (he was best as a box safety), but was expected to just flip that switch in the NFL. Simmons, like Davis, Devin Bush, Darren Lee, Ernie Sims and many others, just wasn’t that crafty at actually doing LB things with their athleticism.

Overvaluing athletic traits at a position where football IQ is a paramount virtue for success is where NFL teams continually foul. There has to be a requisite level of athleticism to make it work, of course; slow and low is not an effective tempo. Change of direction ability, initial burst and open-field speed can’t be ignored, but they shouldn’t be the primary attribute. The ability to diagnose a play pre-snap, quickly read and react to a play, finish tackles and understand coverage responsibilities are more important than running 40 yards in a straight line rapidly.

The NFL does appear to be listening to the same tune. In this draft class, Clemson’s Trenton Simpson was my No. 86 overall prospect. I expected Simpson, a phenomenal athlete, to be selected in the top 40 because of his physical traits even though he didn’t pass my “hold it now, hit it” test. Simpson wound up being the No. 86 overall pick, by the Baltimore Ravens.

Scratching the record back to Jack Campbell, he absolutely passed the “hold it now, hit it” test. The Iowa LB was my No. 23 overall prospect. Detroit is hoping he makes sweeter music as the No. 18 overall pick than so many recent out-of-tune LBs have played. I like his chances.

 

EA Sports is allowing players to opt-in to appear in upcoming college football game

The wildly popular game series is set to return in 2024

If you are a football fan who went to college in the 1990s or early 2000s, you probably spent a good deal of time playing the EA Sports “College Football” video game series. I played the 1993-1996 versions for days at a time.

The company stopped producing the annual release with the 2014 edition. One of the big reasons was the complaints of players who appeared in the game not being able to receive any compensation for their appearance or likeness being used. EA Sports is bringing the game back, and the company and the new NIL rules have mitigated the issue of player compensation.

Mike Rothstein of ESPN reported that EA Sports is allowing players the option to appear in the game. From Rothstein:

Details — such as how much an athlete will receive and the structure of payments — are still being finalized, but the EA Sports representative said the goal is to be “as inclusive and equitable as possible.” On the OneTeam website, the company stated that if the influence of individual sales couldn’t be figured out — including for video game licensing — then “revenue will be divided equally among the athletes included in each licensing program.”

The opt-in ability removes some of the obstacles faced in producing the new version of the game. The college football game is expected to return in 2024. It’s always been a great way to get more familiar with the attributes of players who could eventually enter the NFL, aside from being an exceptionally entertaining diversion.

Don’t expect the NFL to use a draft lottery anytime soon

Other sports leagues use a draft lottery system, but don’t expect the NFL to follow suit

The NBA held its annual draft lottery on Tuesday night. It’s a rite of passage so firmly entrenched that the phrase “draft lottery” no longer raises an eyebrow.

The NHL also adopted a draft lottery, as has the WNBA and several other non-major sports. The weighted system discourages “tanking,” which is deliberately losing to get the worst record to guarantee getting the top pick.

The NFL has never followed suit. And even though the NBA draft lottery is a prime-time event that draws interest and ratings —two things the NFL almost never shies away from —there is little momentum for the draft lottery system to infiltrate football.

There are any number of reasons or excuses why the draft lottery system hasn’t hit the NFL. Among them (in no particular order):

  • Lesser impact of one individual player on a 53-man roster than in other sports.
  • The shorter schedule makes tanking more difficult to succeed (see: 2022 Houston Texans).
  • The variety of different positions needed across different teams greatly exceeds other sports.
  • The fairly robust trade market at the top of the draft; the No. 1 overall pick was traded just this year.

Of course, there are also rampant conspiracy theories about the NBA draft lottery dating back to the very first one in 1985. It was a little too convenient that the New York Knicks landed the top pick and the ability to select a transcendent star college player like Patrick Ewing. The same accusations of a fixed lottery have reared up several times, notably for the Cleveland Cavaliers winning the lottery and local superstar high schooler Lebron James.

Even now, with media members observing the process, there are still doubters about the veracity of the NBA lottery system. For a team like the Detroit Pistons, losing the lottery is a devastating blow–one the NFL desperately hopes to avoid.

The Pistons were the NBA’s worst team in 2022-23, going 17-65. The next-worst teams were the Rockets and Spurs, who each went 22-60. Despite being clearly the worst team for a variety of factors, including an injury to 2021 No. 1 overall pick Cade Cunningham, Detroit won’t pick first. Or second, or even third. The Pistons “lost” the lottery and fell to the No. 5 overall pick.

The NFL, its owners and the broadcast partners simply don’t have the stomach for that. Don’t expect that appetite to change anytime soon.

Matt Ryan’s move to the CBS booth leaves just 3 active players from the 2008 NFL draft

Matt Ryan’s move to the broadcast booth leaves just 3 active players from the 2008 draft still in the NFL

Matt Ryan has traded in his cleats for a microphone. The former MVP and longtime quarterback of the Atlanta Falcons will be calling games on CBS this fall instead of playing in those broadcasts. Ryan denies he’s retired, but it’s difficult to envision him returning from the broadcast booth after the underwhelming 2022 season he had with the Colts.

With Ryan’s departure, there is almost nobody left from the 2008 NFL draft still active in the league.

Ryan was the No. 3 overall pick in that draft. He was the only top-15 overall pick in that draft class who had played a regular-season snap after the 2018 season. Ryan was one of just eight players from the 2008 draft class who played in 2022. The list:

No. 3 – Matt Ryan

18 – Joe Flacco

26 – Duane Brown

49 – DeSean Jackson

50 – Calais Campbell

57 – Chad Henne

153 – Matthew Slater

160 – Josh Johnson

Ryan and Henne both officially retired this offseason. Flacco is an unsigned free agent, as is Johnson. Jackson is “strongly considering” retirement after being released by the Baltimore Ravens, too.

That leaves three actively rostered players from the draft class: Brown, Campbell and Slater. Brown is penciled in as the starting left tackle for the Jets. Campbell recently signed with Ryan’s old team in Atlanta to play another year of defensive end.

Slater deserves special mention for embarking on his 16th season with the New England Patriots, who drafted him out of UCLA as a wide receiver despite the fact he never caught a pass in college. Slater has been one of the NFL’s preeminent special teams players for the bulk of his career, earning 10 Pro Bowl berths.

Falcons superfan doesn’t appreciate 28-3 jokes

This Falcons fan fired back at a heckler during the draft.

One of the coolest aspects of the NFL draft is how the league gives superfans the opportunity to go up on stage and announce a pick for their favorite team. The downside is NFL fans are savages and they will not hold back when they get a chance to take a shot at a fan of another team.

The Falcons fan in the video below learned this the hard way. After going up and announcing the Falcons’ pick, a heckler in the audience threw out the immortal “28-3” joke and of course, the fan didn’t find the humor in it. He clapped back as he stormed off the stage.

The reference was to Super Bowl LI when the Falcons jumped out to a 28-3 lead in the first half, never scoring again and ultimately losing to the New England Patriots 34-28.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CrqetwML_bY/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y%3D

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbx3mxfd049dpp1 player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

Look at everything the Broncos traded to the Seahawks for Russell Wilson

All the picks in the Russell Wilson trade have now been made. Here are all the players the Broncos traded to the Seahawks

One of the most highlighted trades in NFL history has finally run it’s course, as the Seattle Seahawks made all of the draft selections given to them in the trade for quarterback Russell Wilson.

It is hard to imagine that the Broncos thought they would be gift-wrapping the fifth overall pick after acquiring the franchise quarterback from Seattle. But after major struggles in his first season with Denver, that ultimately came to fruition. The Broncos can only hope it all becomes worth it with the addition of former Saints coach Sean Payton, who can come in and try to fix the embattled quarterback.

Ultimately the Seahawks landed the following pieces with the trade departure of Wilson:

-Quarterback Drew Lock

-Tight End Noah Fant

-Defensive lineman Shelby Harris (Free agent)

-2022 first round pick (9th overall): Charles Cross

-2022 second round pick (40th overall): Boye Mafe

-2022 fifth round pick  (158 overall): Tyreke Smith

-2023 first round pick (5th overall): Devon Witherspoon

-2023 second round pick (37 overall): Derick Hall

Looking back on this haul, it is hard to argue that the Seahawks did not win this trade should the trend of Wilson struggling, and the 2023 draft picks develop their high ceiling potential. Given how the Seahawks class from the year prior performed, it seems likely they will get similar production here.

Denver of course landed Russell Wilson, who hopes to turn his career around quickly so as not to sink the Denver franchise. They were also given a 2022 fourth-round pick which was spent on defensive end Eyimoa Uwazurike, who saw limited action as a rookie.

Top takeaways from Day 1 of the 2023 NFL draft

On the Texans bold moves, the QBs, some interesting trades, top values and more

The first round of the 2023 NFL draft went down even more unpredictably than anyone expected. From big trades to unanticipated team selections and players going far away from where they were generally projected, it was quite a Thursday night.

After sorting through all 31 picks and the numerous trades, here’s what stood out from the first round of the 2023 NFL draft.