10 most athletic Patriots’ draft picks of the Bill Belichick era

Who cracked the top-10 most athletic Patriots draft picks? Some names on the list might surprise you.

Whether true or not, New England Patriots fans believe the team typically drafts for old school style players that fit football schemes, while opting to pass on explosive playmaking athletes.

That might have been true when having the greatest quarterback of all time, Tom Brady, leading the offense. The team opted to select more intelligent, passionate players than flashy athletes they needed to develop.

But the truth is the Patriots did in fact draft high-end athletes. Let’s face it, they’re all elite athletes if they’re in the NFL, but in terms of comparing apples to apples (or NFL Players to NFL Players), they did so at a lower clip than most.

RAS, or relative athletic score, has been widely used to quantify just how athletic a player is based on their official combine performances for their position and size. Players are given a 0-10 score, which is derived from other players at the same position throughout history.

The closer a player is to 10.00—and there have been a few—the more “freakish” the athlete. Players like Calvin Johnson, Jordan Davis, and Anthony Richardson are examples of the short list of players since 1987 to score a 10.00 on the RAS scale.

Let’s take a look at the Patriots’ 10 most athletic draft selections in the Bill Belichick era.

How the Steelers nearly lost out on WR Santonio Holmes

The Pittsburgh Steelers traded up in 2006 to select WR Santonio Holmes, but they were a phone call away from drafting Chad Jackson.

Chad Jackson.

Remember him?

I don’t either.

But the Steelers had Jackson, a wide receiver, on their draft board in 2006. Until they didn’t.

In an interview with the Boston Globe, Jackson’s former agent, David Canter, said Jackson answered his phone in a meeting with Steelers head coach Bill Cowher. That ended that. Cowher took him off the Steelers draft board.

I’d be scared to death to answer my phone in a meeting with Cowher. His chin must’ve really been quivering after that.

Coming off their 2005 Super Bowl Victory, the Steelers held the last pick in the first round of the 2006 NFL Draft. That is likely where Jackson once was on the Steelers board.

But the Steelers didn’t like No. 32, so they made a trade with the New York Giants to move up to No. 25. And with that pick, the Steelers selected Ohio State WR Santonio Holmes.

Just imagine for a minute how the history of the Steelers could’ve been re-written without Holmes. No spectacular toe-tap Super Bowl touchdown, no 2008 Super Bowl win, no One for the Thumb.

Had Jackson not answered his phone, the Steelers may have drafted him. Instead, he went to the New England Patriots at No. 36 where he proceeded to play on special teams. Jackson’s injury-riddled career lasted three seasons and 18 games.

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