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49ers trade up to #3
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(03-29-2021, 10:31 AM)Mikey Wrote:(03-28-2021, 07:14 PM)Bullseye Wrote: I would list the order identically. Well of course there are risks associated with the strategy, including all the ones you list above. However, if they never made the trade up, and drafted a QB at 12 and he flopped, they'd still have to consider overpaying in FA (assuming a viable QB ever got on the market) or trade draft capital to get in position to get the replacement. Furthermore, if they never made the trade up and missed out on their QB in such a strong top heavy QB draft like this year's class, there's no telling when they'd get the chance to get another top QB. As I was saying earlier, next year's QB class does not look anywhere near as strong as this one. Right now based upon what I've read, there's only one QB that is carrying a first round grade, and he doesn't seem to have the same grade as Trevor Lawrence..and perhaps not Fields nor Lance. You could also argue that because they have Garoppolo, they aren't truly desperate at the position, and therefore are less apt to make a catastrophic error at the position. Desperation could lead to a reach, and possibly even offering more for a lesser player. That said, the part of me that opposes this trade does so in part because of Mac Jones, and in part because of the price. I do not assert that Mac Jones is a bad QB or for that matter that he can't be a successful QB in the NFL. However, he does NOT in any way offer the array of physical attributes as the other top QBs in this class. He doesn't have the combination of size, arm strength, athletic ability, speed, etc as Lawrence, Fields, Lance, or even Wilson. If he had the physical attributes of Elway, Luck or even a Cam Newton, plus the intangibles Mac Jones seems to offer, I could better understand the willingness to pay so much to trade up. But there are reasons the general consensus is he is rated below the other four guys. As an NFL QB prospect, his physical attributes seem nondescript. Furthermore, he played with absolutely overwhelming surrounding talent during his tenure at Alabama, including Henry Ruggs, Jerry Jeudy, Devonta Smith and Jaylen Waddle- all of whom were either first round picks last year orwill be first round picks this year. That doesn't even include the linemen protecting him and opening the holes for a guy like Najee Harris. Nor does it include a typically star studded defense that routinely produces NFL talent. I haven't seen a QB come from such a powerful program since Steve Walsh came from those late 80s Miami teams, or perhaps more recently, Leinarrt from the early 200s USC teams. Because he is a relatively nondescript physical specimen at the position, that brings the price to move up to get him into heightened scrutiny. In reviewing the prior trades up for first round QBs since 2000, I didn't find a single trade that involved 3 first round picks to get the deal done. But most of the guys those teams moved up for were better physical specimens than Jones, the one exception being Eli Manning. I think the one initial saving grace to this deal is the the first year cost isn't excessive. The 49ers could still have a relatively normal draft class this year. Worst to 1st. Curse Reversed!
We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today! (03-29-2021, 09:44 PM)Bullseye Wrote:(03-29-2021, 10:31 AM)Mikey Wrote: The problem with going that far in when you go all in? I agree with everything you said here. The 9ers being this aggressive for a QB like Mac is risky. They had to know that someone else was planning to move into the 3-6 range for him, otherwise I don't see the urgency of doing the deal a month in advance of the darft. (03-30-2021, 09:52 AM)Mikey Wrote:(03-29-2021, 09:44 PM)Bullseye Wrote: Well of course there are risks associated with the strategy, including all the ones you list above. Someone else on another video I saw raised an interesting point. Would the 49ers have made this deal if Watson were not having his off field problems? Wouldn't they have offered this deal to Houston if they knew Watson's off field problems did not exist? Worst to 1st. Curse Reversed!
(03-29-2021, 10:03 AM)Mikey Wrote: Hypothetically, if I knew for a fact that the player would have the career of Tom Brady, but it would take him a year to reach that level of play, then yes, I would. A franchise quarterback can change the face of a franchise for over a decade. Waiting one year may be a price many teams would be willing to pay. I'm not saying Trey Lance is Brady and I'm not saying I like the trade by San Francisco. I'm just trying to make sense of it. Lance may take more time to develop and be more risky, but some people believe he has a high ceiling because of his physical attributes. If you give up that amount of trade capital, I find it unlikely they are doing it for someone that doesn't have a high ceiling. I don't think you make the trade for a medium-high ceiling guy even if he may have a higher floor or be more ready on day one. Besides, if you take them at their word that they aren't interested in trading Garoppolo, then it's already a given that they don't expect the draft pick to start initially. You don't pay a quarterback $26 million to be a backup. (03-30-2021, 11:04 PM)TheDuke007 Wrote:(03-29-2021, 10:03 AM)Mikey Wrote: Absolutely correct. Let me piggy back on this argument for a moment. If you were the GM of a QB starved team, how much would you be willing to pay the Packers in trade for an in his prime Aaron Rodgers? The same MVP and Super Bowl winning QB who has made multiple Pro bowls. If he were 26 and the Packers put him on the trade market, how much would you pay to get him? I don't have to be Packers GM Brian Gutenkunst or their other executive Mark Murphy to tell you one first round pick wouldn't be close to enough to get him. Two? Getting warmer, but given the importance of the position and the likely number of bidders for the pick, you'd likely have to pay more to get him. Would that price be at all mitigated by the fact he wasn't a first year starter? Of course not! Besides, even in the case of hall of fame caliber QBs, most times their first year as a starter are no great shakes. Troy Aikman went winless as a rookie. Peyton Manning threw 28 INTs as a rookie starter who went 3-13. Both of them are in the Hall of Fame. As TheDuke007 pointed out, brady wasn't a starter in his rookie year, either. Mahomes is considered the best young QB in the game. He rode the pines for most of his rookie year. Reid didn't think he was ready. Does that lessen his value now? The first year as a starter is probably one of the lowest criteria you should use to determine the worth of a QB prospect. Worst to 1st. Curse Reversed!
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Based on what I am reading about his pro day yesterday, I think Mac Jones is not going to be the pick at #3.
(03-31-2021, 09:14 AM)Bullseye Wrote:PREACH.(03-31-2021, 05:21 AM)The Real Marty Wrote: Based on what I am reading about his pro day yesterday, I think Mac Jones is not going to be the pick at #3. Not having to talk myself into one of these other 4 QBs is so nice. (03-31-2021, 09:15 AM)Cleatwood Wrote:I think all of the guys being discussed as first rounders have good things to offer a team looking for a QB. But I think Lawrence has the fewest questions and the most strengths, and is the best candidate overall.(03-31-2021, 09:14 AM)Bullseye Wrote: Perhaps not.PREACH. The fact we can get him without having to give up a fortune makes last season palatable-even worthwhile. That said, all of his attributes do not absolve this team from the responsibility of giving him adequate help. He is the most important part of the puzzle, but by no means is he the only part of the puzzle. Worst to 1st. Curse Reversed!
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