I don't think that's the accurate interpretation of my way of looking at it, though.NCF wrote: ↑04 Nov 2021 10:52Two ways of looking at it.
The way @YoHoChecko is. They don't value ILB, they got lucky, and still don't care and won't place additional value on ILB.
The way @Drj820 is. They don't value ILB, they got lucky, but based on Campbell's impact will change their value in the future.
We'll see.
I think "they got lucky and they will continue trying to get lucky." (I see it similarly to the RB position, honetsly)
I think the volume-based approach of taking a lot of swings at athletically talented (Burks, Summers) or highly instinctive (Barnes, Kirksey) low-budget players will lead to a payoff, and Campbell is the payoff. And Gutey is in year 3 of running this team and has already taken ILB with a 3rd, a 5th, a 7th, an UDFA, and two veterans on cheap 1-team deals.
There seems to be a thought that we're looking at the Packers over a 15 year timespan as if we don't have a new GM and coach in place who are looking at things differently. You guys are looking at a ILB hole that has been apparent for a decade, but the new GM just started building his version of the roster 3 years ago.
From Gutey's perspective, it took him 3 years to fill the hole at ILB through a volume-based, low-budget approach; given that there were higher priorities to rebuilding the roster, and given that the team went 13-3 in the two previous years, I think filling the hole by year 3 isn't going to cause them to change their approach to filling it. It doesn't mean they won't change their valuation on the impact of it. It doesn't even mean they don't value it.
It means there are competing resources on a team and the approach Gutey has taken to ILB was "take a lot of shots and one is bound to pay off." That Campbell fulfilled the "bound to pay off" part of it doesn't, to me, seem like a reason to expect them to change what they're doing.