Actually they are good cases of having a good QB and still drafting one high. Carson Wentz was a very good player for Philly. Yet they still drafted Hurts high in the second round. The Chiefs were an 11 win team with Alex Smith, they still spent an 10th overall pick on Mahomes. It didn't matter they had a good QB already, they wanted a great one.Monster wrote: ↑Wed Nov 08, 2023 3:26 pmDid the chiefs and Eagles draft a QB every year to accomplish that chance you are wanting? No.Wolvesfan21 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 08, 2023 8:45 amYeah I know. Your odds go way down. How many superstar QB's win compared to randos (figure superstar QB's are top 10 but for sure top 5)? The point is to get the best odds to win the superbowl. The betting odds have the Chiefs and Eagles at about 20%. Both have great QB's (top 10 and number one). Meanwhile the Vikings are at 1% 100/1. Count in some juice for the books and they are under 1 percent.
I want a 20% chance not 1%.
The reality is is that there are 2 things a franchise can do in terms of finding that guy at QB.
1. Have an actual eye for talent. This is something the Vikings haven’t had in terms of selecting a QB for many years. It doesn’t have to be the GM or even the head coach but usually it’s one of those people.
2. Able to develop those players. Sure some guys probably would have been HOF regardless but who do you feel like is more likely to develop a QB the team that has Andy Reid coaching or any head coach after Denny Green up to the current staff?
It’s not just about taking a bunch of shots at QB. You need to know what you are looking for, have people to develop those players. While I believe NFL is a ton about systems for players and so I get that teams draft based on systems they have in place…how many teams passed on Lamar Jackson because they didn’t want to change what they were doing already? Maybe it was only a couple but I’m still puzzled how he dropped that far. Meanwhile during the Denny Green era the Vikings had a number of good or worthwhile QBs brought to their roster.
I’ll go a little deeper in the weeds on NFL QBs. It occurred to me one reason why the position has less than 30 good starters is…there is nowhere for QBs to develop except in college and practices. You aren’t sending your top development backup to play in some offseason league to get them experience. It’s the fringe guys that are just hoping to get a shot that are playing in those leagues. QB is so much more complex than say a RB. RB is more than just knowing a play seeing a hole and running fast through it or making a cut etc but still. QB is the guy every plays goes through. I think the NFL would have a better product if they found more ways to help teams develop QBs. Maybe every team should get some sort of developmental QB spot on their roster. The NBA keeps having more and more talent infused into the league. Of course a significant piece of that is the worldwide growth of the spot. Another huge piece is the the g-league being a true developmental league plus so many other international leagues players can play in. The new rule the NFL implemented this year after the 49ers didn’t have a healthy QB in a playoff game rewards teams to some extent for having another QB on the roster. The other issue with teams developing QBs is that most teams want to have a vet backup. They don’t want to go into their offseason program praying that their rookie is going to be good enough if they have to play. Plenty of vet backups are worthy of their position especially depending on the roster makeup and the system fit. Vet backups take away opportunities away from younger guys development which makes sense but also it reduces practice reps etc etc. I think the NFL needs to figure out how to develop more QBs.
Sure they didn't every single year draft one high. But they did have good QB's and they still took shots and won because of it. They Vikings don't even take shots. You will never hit a home run if you don't swing. I say the more swings the better. And it's not like you can't trade your backups for picks later on either. QB's are always in demand and teams will take shots on backups even. So even if you draft one and you have a good one already it doesn't make it a sunk cost. Let them ball out in preseason and trade them if need be. I think filling the QB room with the most talent makes real sense though.
Sure you could draft a bust too, but that is true for any position. Backup QB's seem to hold value, especially on the rookie contracts too. The Patriots would draft QB's even though they had Tom freakin Brady. They ended up trading many as well and still getting a fair return. Cassel, Jimmy G. etc.
It's actually idiotic and pathetic to not draft QB's. (see zero SB Vikings who rarely do)