2024 Draft Discussion
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In 2021, the Packers committed to Maurice Drayton as Special Teams Coordinator.
in 2022, the Packers committed to Amari Rodgers as their preferred return man.
In 2023, the Packers committed to Anders Carlson.
I hope the commitment to Carlson eventually turns out better than the other two commitments, but it cannot be disputed that Anders had a horrible 2023 season and that his poor kicking cost the team dearly in both the regular season and in the playoffs.
His leash should be very, very short heading into the 2024 season.
in 2022, the Packers committed to Amari Rodgers as their preferred return man.
In 2023, the Packers committed to Anders Carlson.
I hope the commitment to Carlson eventually turns out better than the other two commitments, but it cannot be disputed that Anders had a horrible 2023 season and that his poor kicking cost the team dearly in both the regular season and in the playoffs.
His leash should be very, very short heading into the 2024 season.
This was persuasive, you convinced me Carlson should stay. 13 missed kicks isn't bad at all, 4 for 10 40-49 yards is awesome. Though, now that this is the criteria, I am also convinced Nijman and Savage must stay. The Packers made a commitment by drafting them, and they are right on track even with the pain of their performances from last night.Scott4Pack wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 14:35Let Carlson play.
From the beginning of this season, the Packers made a commitment to develop their young talent (without "rebuilding"). Carlson is part of that. That means they were willing to let him work out his issues. Part of that is playoff games. They were willing to risk some in the short haul with the hope that he will become a very good kicker in the long haul.
So far, they are actually on track. Even with the pain of a miss like last night.
Forbes is chiming in on Carlson...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/robreische ... the-price/
Last edited by wallyuwl on 21 Jan 2024 15:19, edited 1 time in total.
Savage and Campbell where our only 2 defenders credited with a PD in that game, Savage had 4 tackles, Campbell 8, If Savage will take a short and moderate money deal he'll be back next seasonwallyuwl wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 15:09This was persuasive, you convinced me Carlson should stay. 13 missed kicks isn't bad at all, 4 for 10 40-49 yards is awesome. Though, now that this is the criteria, I am also convinced Nijman and Savage must stay. The Packers made a commitment by drafting them, and they are right on track even with the pain of their performances from last night.Scott4Pack wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 14:35Let Carlson play.
From the beginning of this season, the Packers made a commitment to develop their young talent (without "rebuilding"). Carlson is part of that. That means they were willing to let him work out his issues. Part of that is playoff games. They were willing to risk some in the short haul with the hope that he will become a very good kicker in the long haul.
So far, they are actually on track. Even with the pain of a miss like last night.
Was the pass defensed the dropped int?Yoop wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 15:19Savage and Campbell where our only 2 defenders credited with a PD in that game, Savage had 4 tackles, Campbell 8, If Savage will take a short and moderate money deal he'll be back next seasonwallyuwl wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 15:09This was persuasive, you convinced me Carlson should stay. 13 missed kicks isn't bad at all, 4 for 10 40-49 yards is awesome. Though, now that this is the criteria, I am also convinced Nijman and Savage must stay. The Packers made a commitment by drafting them, and they are right on track even with the pain of their performances from last night.Scott4Pack wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 14:35Let Carlson play.
From the beginning of this season, the Packers made a commitment to develop their young talent (without "rebuilding"). Carlson is part of that. That means they were willing to let him work out his issues. Part of that is playoff games. They were willing to risk some in the short haul with the hope that he will become a very good kicker in the long haul.
So far, they are actually on track. Even with the pain of a miss like last night.
This is a business with few guarantees. The commitment only lasts as long as you have perceived value. I'm fine keeping Carlson. I wouldn't mind Savage as depth as long as we find a killer back there.
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With what I said about the youth commitment, I would also say this:wallyuwl wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 15:09This was persuasive, you convinced me Carlson should stay. 13 missed kicks isn't bad at all, 4 for 10 40-49 yards is awesome. Though, now that this is the criteria, I am also convinced Nijman and Savage must stay. The Packers made a commitment by drafting them, and they are right on track even with the pain of their performances from last night.Scott4Pack wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 14:35Let Carlson play.
From the beginning of this season, the Packers made a commitment to develop their young talent (without "rebuilding"). Carlson is part of that. That means they were willing to let him work out his issues. Part of that is playoff games. They were willing to risk some in the short haul with the hope that he will become a very good kicker in the long haul.
So far, they are actually on track. Even with the pain of a miss like last night.
Forbes is chiming in on Carlson...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/robreische ... the-price/
1. The course on Savage has gone further enough to determine if the Packers still see a higher ceiling for him. I could see them letting him go or keeping him either way.
2. Still find a kicker to give Carlson plenty of competition next TC. Don't just find a guy who goes thru the motions. We want REAL competition.
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You said "let Carlson play."Scott4Pack wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 16:362. Still find a kicker to give Carlson plenty of competition next TC. Don't just find a guy who goes thru the motions. We want REAL competition.
He needs to be replaced, not competition. He sucked in college and is worse in the NFL.
With the first 5 picks (1, 2, 2, 3, 3) I want (in any order):
LT, S, ILB, DT, and a RB (Trey Benson)
LT, S, ILB, DT, and a RB (Trey Benson)
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Swap that DT for a C; we're pretty good at DT. Clark and Wyatt are beasts. Slaton is a solid rotational nose. rooks and Wooden are exciting young pass rushers.
Myers is mid in his best moments.
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Was this true this year? It seemed he was fairly good.
https://wisportsheroics.com/green-bay-p ... myers-pff/
Palmy - "Very few have the ability to truly excel regardless of system. For many the system is the difference between being just a guy or an NFL starter. Fact is, everyone is talented at this level."
If I were to swap one it would be for a slot CB.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 18:43Swap that DT for a C; we're pretty good at DT. Clark and Wyatt are beasts. Slaton is a solid rotational nose. rooks and Wooden are exciting young pass rushers.
Myers is mid in his best moments.
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Agree, I do not know if we got a roster spot for another DL. slot CB, or double up at SFoosball wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 19:18If I were to swap one it would be for a slot CB.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 18:43Swap that DT for a C; we're pretty good at DT. Clark and Wyatt are beasts. Slaton is a solid rotational nose. rooks and Wooden are exciting young pass rushers.
Myers is mid in his best moments.
He sucked until like late November/early December.Pckfn23 wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 18:48Was this true this year? It seemed he was fairly good.
https://wisportsheroics.com/green-bay-p ... myers-pff/
I'm coming around him. For the first time. I never liked him. But I am getting to the point where I don't feel we need to spend a top 60 pick on Center which is a lus.
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For me it's like... yeah, he's improved. He's still not, like, good. And he's got one year left on his contract? Are we going to... spend money on him? No, we're not. We better not.
So let's go get someone better than him right now. Let it be a competition this year and a succession plan for next year.
Plus we need a backup C. We need a starting caliber OG either this year or next year. And we need a third OT behind Walker and Tom (or to compete with them, which is like a bevvy of riches).
Even if we have our starting 5 OL on the roster right now, I still think we need to draft 3--C, G, T--this year. For the depth. The cheap depth with developmental upside. And we have like 10-11 picks, so why not?
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But he kinda was this year.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:02For me it's like... yeah, he's improved. He's still not, like, good.
Palmy - "Very few have the ability to truly excel regardless of system. For many the system is the difference between being just a guy or an NFL starter. Fact is, everyone is talented at this level."
Myers played well enough for me not to feel like we need to draft a starting C, but not good enough for me to take C off the table. He was decent, but inconsistent, even in the latter stretch of the season.
Ideally we can draft a C/G interior lineman in Day 2 or so. We can play them at RG if Rhyan does not take the starting role, and/or have them take over at C if we decline to keep Myers long term.
Ideally we can draft a C/G interior lineman in Day 2 or so. We can play them at RG if Rhyan does not take the starting role, and/or have them take over at C if we decline to keep Myers long term.
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No, not really. He was "not bad." He was "above average."Pckfn23 wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:08But he kinda was this year.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:02For me it's like... yeah, he's improved. He's still not, like, good.
Even your arguments for him have been "fairly good" and "kinda good"
He wasn't "let's pay him NFL starter money to continue to play C for us" good.
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That's an interesting rephrase of, not good.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:18No, not really. He was "not bad." He was "above average."Pckfn23 wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:08But he kinda was this year.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:02
For me it's like... yeah, he's improved. He's still not, like, good.
Even your arguments for him have been "fairly good" and "kinda good"
He wasn't "let's pay him NFL starter money to continue to play C for us" good.
Palmy - "Very few have the ability to truly excel regardless of system. For many the system is the difference between being just a guy or an NFL starter. Fact is, everyone is talented at this level."
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I mean if you're playing semantics, you have to include all of it. The punctation. The emphasis. The context.
I said he's improved, but he's not, like, good
Maybe it doesn't translate the way I wanted it to, but that wording and emphasis indicates that I would not say "Josh Myers is good."
I would only say it with some sort of modifier. Josh Myers is "fairly good" or "kinda good" are your choices, which stand in perfect agreement with my statement that he's not... "good."
It means that the word good does not stand alone as a descriptor of him. It requires some other word or caveat.
I separated the words not and good very clearly for that purpose. I apologize if it doesn't translate to what I meant, but since you are a stickler for semantics and phrasing, I'll explain the heck out of it.
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Thank you for explaining what, not, like, good, means.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 20:40I mean if you're playing semantics, you have to include all of it. The punctation. The emphasis. The context.
I said he's improved, but he's not, like, good
Maybe it doesn't translate the way I wanted it to, but that wording and emphasis indicates that I would not say "Josh Myers is good."
I would only say it with some sort of modifier. Josh Myers is "fairly good" or "kinda good" are your choices, which stand in perfect agreement with my statement that he's not... "good."
It means that the word good does not stand alone as a descriptor of him. It requires some other word or caveat.
I separated the words not and good very clearly for that purpose. I apologize if it doesn't translate to what I meant, but since you are a stickler for semantics and phrasing, I'll explain the heck out of it.
Palmy - "Very few have the ability to truly excel regardless of system. For many the system is the difference between being just a guy or an NFL starter. Fact is, everyone is talented at this level."
I was thinking today that we really missed Amos out there. Not sure if Amos is still good, but we really could have used a guy who is a sure-tackler, and that was Amos's strength.Yoop wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 13:10no he was not right about Savage, he just wasn't a rangy single high safety, true he with hind sight was a reach, however he has done well in 2 high safety, also think he's a better tackler then Lupe gives him credit to be, Savage does best when Barry allows him freedom to roam.texas wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 12:17I was talking about this with my friend and he noted that nowadays there aren't nearly as many high quality safeties as there were back in the day.Labrev wrote: ↑21 Jan 2024 10:13
Not many top tier safeties. Cooper DeJean is a first-round guy and probably just out of reach, but you never know. Tyler Nubin is a borderline Round 1-2 guy who I am fine with taking late in the first round. Then there is a smattering of Day 2 guys who can maybe be solid starters.
And btw, 5 years later, it's clear he was correct about Savage.
saying that I think his contract is up, so time to move on or pony up, but who from all the UFA safety prospect is actually a improvement over savage? I think that the question we need to answer, and if ya think we can draft a more ready to play next year safety, well good luck with that, imo safety, like ILB, almost like TE are a tough learning curve at this level
seems like RB's are ranked early second day, I'd move up round 2 for the best of the bunch, and take another mid rounds, on our team RB is a key position, MLF's offense requires a excellent running attack, good for Love too.
But yeah, I agree, lack of good safeties. And yeah, I would do that for the RBs too.