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  • in reply to: Rams 2nd pick, Darrell Henderson, RB #100535
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Whatever Gurley’s health turns out to be, I still like the Henderson pick.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Pick #5: Rams take Greg Gaines at 134 #100513
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Pick #5: Rams take Greg Gaines at 134 #100511
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Gaines or Mack from Texas were the guys I wanted if we could not get Saunders.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams 1st pick, Taylor Rapp, safety #100507
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/uw-husky-football/four-huskies-ranked-among-pffs-top-101-players-for-the-2018-season/

    No. 41: Taylor Rapp

    Rapp, a junior from Bellingham, ranked as the nations’ No. 2 safety and No. 5 overall player in the Pac-12, behind Murphy, Burr-Kirven, WSU’s Gardner Minshew (No. 38) and Stanford’s JJ Arcega-Whiteside. PFF wrote: “He blitzed on 41 occasions and came away with 11 pressures that included five sacks, just rounding out an all-around dominant year for one of the nation’s best defenses.” Rapp declared for the NFL draft last week.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Pick #5: Rams take Greg Gaines at 134 #100505
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/uw-husky-football/four-huskies-ranked-among-pffs-top-101-players-for-the-2018-season/
    No. 52: Greg Gaines

    Gaines, a senior from La Habra, Calif., ranked No. 7 in the Pac-12 and joined rare company among interior defensive linemen. PFF wrote: “Far more than just a run stopper in 2018, Gaines stepped up his pass-rushing ability to the tune of 45 total QB pressures, bullying his way to a 77.9 pass-rushing grade. This is in no fashion to say he didn’t continue his run-stopping prowess as he tallied 36 total defensive stops as he joined just Quinnen Williams and Christian Wilkins in recording at least 40 pressures and at least 35 stops.”

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Pick #5: Rams take Greg Gaines at 134 #100501
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    ===

    link to Boylhart: link: https://www.thehuddlereport.com/blog/?p=534

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Pick #5: Rams take Greg Gaines at 134 #100500
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    Agamemnon

    in reply to: reactions to the Rams 2019 draft #100487
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    We knew there would be value throughout the second and third rounds. I give Snead credit for getting an extra pick out of the trading. Instead of 3 good players, we have 4 good players.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Draft Reference Materials #100486
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Ram have 4 picks for day 3. They equal 74.5.

    162 =  26.2
    167 =  24.2
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1
    
    

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Draft Reference Materials #100480
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Rams have 8 picks. They equal 606.5

     79 = 195
     94 = 124
     99 = 104
    101 =  96
    133 =  39
    167 =  24.2
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1
    
    Rams trade picks 94 and 99 for pick 70.
    Rams have 7 picks.  They equal 618.5
     70 - 240
     79 = 195
    101 =  96
    133 =  39
    167 =  24.2
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1

    Rams use picks 70 and 79
    Rams 5 picks. They = 183.5

    101 =  96
    133 =  39
    167 =  24.2
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1
    
    Rams trade picks 101 and 133 for picks 97 and 162
    Rams have 5 picks they = 186.7, a gain of 4.2.
    
     97 = 112
    162 =  26.2
    167 =  24.2
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1

    Rams use pick 97.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Draft Reference Materials #100474
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Rams start with these 7 picks. They equal 901.1 on the trade chart.

     31 = 600
     94 = 124
     99 = 104
    133 =  39
    169 =  23.3
    203 =   9.8
    251 =   1
    
    Falcons received No. 31 and No. 203 picks from Rams for No. 45 and No. 79 picks
    
    Rams have 7 picks.  They equal 936.3, a gain of 35.2.
    
     45 = 450
     79 = 195
     94 = 124
     99 = 104
    133 =  39
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1
    
    Patriots received No. 45 pick from Rams for No. 56 and No. 101 picks
    
    Rams have 8 picks.  They equal 922.3, a loss of 24.
    
     56 = 340
     79 = 195
     94 = 124
     99 = 104
    101 =  96
    133 =  39
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1
    
    Chiefs received No. 56 pick from Rams for No. 61 and No. 167
    
    Rams have 9 picks.  They equal 898.5, a loss of 23.8.
    
     61 = 292
     79 = 195
     94 = 124
     99 = 104
    101 =  96
    133 =  39
    167 =  24.2
    169 =  23.3
    251 =   1
    

    Rams pick at 61. They gained or lost virtually no value, but gained 2 picks.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Best remaining players, day 2 #100360
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    I heard that they wanted the CB, Baker, but he got taken at #30.
    .
    Some players I like, especially Risner.

    19. OT Dalton Risner, Kansas State
    26. C Elgton Jenkins, Mississippi State
    27. S Nasir Adderley, Delaware
    29. Edge Chase Winovich, Michigan
    33. CB David Long, Michigan
    34. OT Greg Little, Ole Miss
    36. CB Amani Oruwariye, Penn State
    39. CB Justin Layne, Michigan State

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Best remaining players, day 2 #100348
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Rams kill it, if they draft Risner at #45. Lot good players in the entire 3rd round.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Draft Comments #100333
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    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Draft Comments #100329
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    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Draft Comments #100328
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    Agamemnon

    in reply to: We just traded the pick #100323
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    Agamemnon

    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Who will the LA Rams take in the 2019 NFL Draft? I break down who the Rams might take in every round based on position and projected round availability. Bonus points for players who played in the Senior Bowl and who have met with the Rams. There is so much value in the second round and the Rams should trade back if given the opportunity. Who do you think the Rams should take?

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams taking calls about moving down from 31 #100301
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    http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000001027789/article/peter-schrager-2019-nfl-mock-draft-30-texans-move-into-top-10
    Peter Schrager 2019 NFL mock draft 3.0: Texans move into top 10

    Updated: April 25, 2019 at 12:21 p.m.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: tweets … 4/23 & 4/24 #100288
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    If we are not going to pick Dline, I would rather have a DB than a center.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Gurley: long thread, on der knee #100275
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    So where’s CJ?

    Because if you believe Gurley’s future is bleak…why let CJ go?

    I know it’s the Big Thing to minimize RBs these days…but…they is necessary.

    Detroit signed him when they could not get Brown.

    Agamemnon

    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Agamemnon

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    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams exercise Jared Goff's fifth-year option #100260
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    https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/pro-examining-the-statistical-significance-of-paying-franchise-quarterbacks

    Examining the statistical significance of paying franchise quarterbacks
    By Eric Eager • Apr 23, 2019

    It’s been this way for decades, but it’s truer now than it’s ever been: the National Football League is a quarterback league. Whether it’s using traditional statistics like yards per pass attempt, something more advanced like expected points in the passing game, or our own PFF grades, nothing moves the needle in terms of winning games more than having plus play at the quarterback position.

    Likely in reaction to this truth, teams have been more than eager to use the tools they have at their disposal to acquire talent at the position: high draft capital and big contracts. Of the 32 NFL teams, 20 are starting quarterbacks that were selected in the first round by that team, while another two (Oakland and Cincinnati) are starting quarterbacks they themselves selected in the early second round. Tom Brady, Russell Wilson, and (to a far lesser extent) Dak Prescott are exceptions to the rule, having been drafted later by their current team, while Jimmy Garoppolo and Kirk Cousins found a second home (furnished expensively) after outperforming their draft position for their original team.
    The winner’s curse, as it were, is that once a quarterback outperforms what is, after the 2011 CBA agreement, an extremely modest rookie deal, there is significant pressure for him to “reset the market” at the position. As a result, the NFL’s highest-paid quarterback (measured by either total contract or per-year) have often been players like Joe Flacco, Matthew Stafford, Derek Carr, Garopollo and Cousins – signal callers that, while good players, are not true difference makers at the position. Furthermore, the six highest-paid quarterbacks last season played for teams that, for a number of reasons, did not make the playoffs, calling into question the efficacy of paying top-dollar for a quarterback.

    So, the question after last week’s four-year, $140-million extension for Russell Wilson with the Seattle Seahawks, particularly since Seattle has only four draft picks in this week’s draft, and substantial needs across their roster, is: Did the front office do the right thing?

    Wilson is truly an elite player at the position, generating the sixth-most wins above replacement since being drafted in the third round of the 2012 NFL draft, behind only Brady, Drew Brees, Matt Ryan, Aaron Rodgers, and Ben Roethlisberger among quarterbacks in that span. So, unlike players like Flacco, Stafford, Carr, and Cousins, one can make a case for Wilson to be, at a given time, the highest-paid player at the position. That said, being a member of the list above does not guarantee team success; Ryan and Brees have each missed the playoffs in three of the last five years, Aaron Rodgers’ Green Bay Packers have had a losing record the last two seasons, and Big Ben’s Steelers missed the playoffs in 2018. The only quarterback in that group to win a Super Bowl since Russell Wilson in 2013 is Tom Brady, whose salary has been a modest percentage of the Patriots payroll for a while now.

    To study this further, I grabbed salary data from our friends at OverTheCap.com (who do terrific work), and I used their measure of total spending by position group from 2013 – 2018 (where their data is available). As expected, there’s a bimodal distribution when looking at the quarterback position’s percentage of the total team spending – some teams having young quarterbacks on modest rookie deals (plus relatively inexpensive backups), while others have veteran quarterbacks on market-level deals.

    Does paying a quarterback more get you a better quarterback?

    A natural question is whether or not teams are getting plus performance out of their quarterback as a result of paying them a bigger share of their payroll. Using PFF’s wins above replacement model (WAR, the full methodology of which will be released within the coming weeks) we measured the number of wins a team should have had in a given season by adding up their WAR (and adding three additional wins as the baseline). I then took the quarterback’s WAR, along with that WAR’s percentage of its team’s implied wins, and found that both metrics had a statistically significant relationship with the quarterback’s percentage of payroll. However, the relationships in both cases are pretty weak (r-squared equal to 0.092 and 0.108, respectively), showing that, while higher salaries do on average lead to better play at the quarterback position, they do not guarantee it.

    Does paying a quarterback more lead to more wins?

    However, the point of the discussion is whether paying quarterbacks top dollar leaves too little in the way of additional spending to compete – due to a lack of talent on the rest of the roster. To test this hypothesis, we looked at total team wins (including playoffs) versus the percentage of team spending allocated to the quarterback, and we found no statistically significant relationship. This has been noted by a few authors, but to add some context to the discussion, we also displayed the WAR for each team’s leading quarterback (in terms of snaps) heading into that season as a measure of how “elite” the signal caller of that team was – as we know that there are plenty of teams that pay non-elite quarterbacks significant money. Darker shades of green imply better quarterbacks entering the year (WAR entering the year isn’t a perfect measure. See Patrick Mahomes, who had basically no WAR heading into 2018). Data points above the straight line are teams performing better than expected and those below the line are worse.

    Conclusion

    Scarcity is real in the NFL; every dollar that is spent on one player cannot be spent on another, and while the quarterback is the most important position, there are even diminishing returns to paying them too much money. That said, not every quarterback will be as gracious as Tom Brady, who consistently takes less than he’s worth to help the Patriots build a winning team (even that dynamic appears to be abating in 2019, with Brady taking a bigger share of New England’s cap than before).

    Some players, like Russell Wilson, will command top dollar, and the real question is whether or not they will deserve it. Wilson likely does. He’s averaged over 2.5 WAR in his first seven seasons. Teams with quarterbacks earning 11% or more of their team’s spending going into the season with quarterbacks averaging 2.2 WAR the previous three seasons win 10 or more games (including playoffs) roughly 60% of the time. Teams without such quarterbacks do so just under 30% of the time. These cutoffs are arbitrary, but make the point – the only time you should pay a quarterback top dollar is A.) If he’s in the elite group that contains Brady, Brees, Ryan, Rodgers, Roethlisberger, Rivers, Luck, and Wilson or B.) If he’s projected into this top group in the future.

    Along that vein, teams need to be able to project their rookie-deal quarterback forward in a way that can differentiate between a good quarterback and a great one. This is not a trivial task – since confounding variables like supporting cast and defense will take different values when a signal caller is on his rookie deal than when he is paid like a top-flight starter. Things like Pro Football Focus grades and quarterback clusters – that differentiate between process and results and go a long way toward differentiating credit in the passing game can help us in this regard, as can the context-adjusted projection systems we’ve discussed for college players in the lead up to the draft. Looking at stable subsets of data like clean pockets will also help in determining if a quarterback is a flash in the pan or a real superstar in the making. If he’s a true superstar, pay him. If not, move on… even if he’s good.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams exercise Jared Goff's fifth-year option #100256
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Join us as we let you behind the curtains to watch a Behind The Scenes discussion among PFF’s own Cris Collinsworth, Steve Palazzolo, George Chahrouri, and Eric Eager. The guys discuss the continuous trend of the NFL paying record amounts to their QBs. They break down when they believe it’s okay to do so and when they feel like a team is better off going after another QB in the draft instead.

    Agamemnon

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    Jamel Dean, CB, Auburn

    Coming into the combine the cornerbacks conversation began with Greedy Williams, Deandre Baker and Byron Murphy. Dean changed that narrative in 4.30 seconds.

    At 6-1, 206 pounds, Dean looks the part, and it’s confirmed when you watch him play. Here’s what we wrote in our notes last fall: “Solid in single coverage, especially on go routes down the sideline, uses sideline to his advantage, has the speed to keep pace with WR.”

    Yeah, that’s an understatement. That 4.3 time means he has the speed to keep pace with just about anybody on the planet. It also means that he’s a solid Day 2 pick and in the 50-something days between now and the draft he could find himself in the first-round conversation too if a team feels comfortable with his medical check.

    If we would draft Savage and then Dean, we would have world class speed in our secondary.

    I bet Seattle drafts him with the extra pick they got from KC.

    Agamemnon

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    Agamemnon

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    Brett Kollmann
    Published on Apr 22, 2019
    All individual picks are timecoded below for those of you who don’t have the time or the Ritalin supply to get through the whole draft in one sitting. Enjoy the show, and feel free to leave questions and comments below!

    1. Cardinals – 02:33
    2. 49ers – 03:56
    3. Jets – 05:09
    4. Raiders – 06:17
    5. Buccaneers – 08:10
    6. Giants – 09:35
    7. Jaguars – 10:52
    8. Lions – 13:01
    9. Bills – 14:59
    10. Broncos – 15:51
    11. Bengals – 17:35
    12. Packers – 18:26
    13. Dolphins – 20:27
    14. Falcons – 22:02
    15. Redskins – 23:07
    16. Panthers – 25:13
    17. Giants – 26:29
    18. Vikings – 28:07
    19. Titans – 29:27
    20. Steelers – 30:49
    21. Seahawks – 32:03
    22. Ravens – 33:58
    23. Texans – 36:09
    24. Raiders – 37:45
    25. Eagles – 40:24
    26. Colts – 41:26
    27. Raiders – 42:57
    28. Chargers – 44:26
    29. Chiefs – 46:08
    30. Packers – 47:11
    31. Rams – 48:35
    32. Patriots – 50:01

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: tweets & other bits … 4/22 #100226
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    Downtown Rams@DowntownRams
    For the record, if the #Rams take Jachai Polite at 31 that’s still a good pick. Just because his value dropped doesn’t mean he’s going to fall out of the first. Don’t assume he will be there in the third. He’s an uber talented pass rusher.

    For the record, Jake. I don’t agree.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: speculating about the Rams draft #100225
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
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    So, the Eagles got two second round picks in consecutive years and a fourth round pick in exchange for their first round pick and a fourth round pick.

    I would consider taking future picks as long as the value matched. A second round pick for next year is generally consider equal to a mid 3rd round pick for this year. So the Eagles got the equivalent of a second and a third and a fourth. imo

    Agamemnon

Viewing 30 posts - 1,561 through 1,590 (of 7,618 total)