Read More...The issue of redheadedness and athletic performance took center stage before the 2011 NFL draft, when Sports Illustrated’s Peter King interviewed an anonymous head coach who questioned Texas Christian University product Andy Dalton’s ability to lead a team from the quarterback spot. The scout’s objections were based less on Dalton’s arm strength, pocket presence and his Wonderlic score than his hair color.
“Has there ever been a redheaded quarterback in the NFL who’s really done ...
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1. Smyly Smile (Walewander) posted on November 07, 2012 at 02:01 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Wow, the Rays player production machine is really sputtering. That's an ugly top 10.
When 2 of your top three prospects are ex-Cubs, yes, yes it is.
Good point. That also highlights how bad their drafting has been lately.
a 2011 crop that included a record 12 picks in the first two rounds
Obviously you'd rather have a ton of picks than not, but the potential impact of this was kinda overblown at the time. My quick and dirty counting says that, out of those 12 draft slots, there have been
79 players with 2+ WAR or about a 1 in 6 chance (40 drafts * 12 slots)
39 players with 10+ WAR or about a 1 in 12 chance
which works out lovely and we can say that out of those 12 picks, the Rays should expect one 2+ WAR player and one 10+ WAR player.
That would be a good outcome for a single draft but it's not earth-shattering on its face. Among those specific picks you have one super-duper-star in Maddux, a second super-duper-but-unsigned-star in the Unit, Fred Lynn (appears twice, counted twice, only signed once) and Jimmy Key as the big stars. Obviously if Tampa hit that kind of jackpot with any of those picks, they'll be ecstatic. Realistically, they have found something between JJ Hardy and Carl Crawford.
Their drafting prowess seems overhyped to me. They were lucky Longoria fell to them at the #3 pick (Hochevar and Greg Reynolds); Hamilton was obviously a good pick talent-wise; Price #1 overall has worked out; Upton at #2 overall has been fine but not spectacular. That's surely solid, maybe even above-average given where they were picking.
Where they've done quite nicely is in later rounds. Crawford is their top WAR pick to date and he was a 2nd rounder. Hellickson (7 WAR) was in the 4th. Huff, a long time ago, was 5th. Joe Kennedy and Matt Moore in the 8th; Desmond Jennings in the 10th; James Shields in the 16th. That to me suggests good development more than good drafting. Picking well in the top 3 spots is not hard -- it just takes money, a copy of BA and not being the Royals or Pirates GM.
The 2012 Devil Rays had about 41 WAR overall and 24 of them came from drafted players, more than 25% of it from David Price. 24 WAR from drafted players probably leads the league -- certainly easily beats the O's and A's and even the Giants despite Posey and Cain and Angels despite Trout and Weaver. (Note I didn't include amateur FAs)
When 2 of your top three prospects are ex-Cubs, yes, yes it is.
I did not expect Beckham to be in the top ten. He wasn't there two years ago, and hasn't been anything special since then.
-- MWE
It's a weird placement. I'd have Mahtook and Hager, at least, higher than him.
Yeah, but he was also suspended.
-- MWE
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