Friday, April 29, 2022

Day 1 of the 2022 NFL Draft and the Detroit Lions


Day 1 of the 2022 NFL Draft is in the books. The Detroit Lions came away with their original number two overall pick (no trades) and chose Edge Player Aidan Hutchinson (the number one player on my big board) from Michigan. He is a Campbell/Lions type of player. Loves the game. Never stops. Wants to keep getting better. All the things the Lions want in a player. For his bio, check this out: https://www.thehuddlereport.com/blog/?p=2118

I figured that either Walker (first overall pick by the Jaguars) or Hutchinson was going to be the Lions pick almost a week ago, and that is how it worked out. Hutch was the overall number one player on my draft board and the Lions got him with the second overall pick. If they can coach him up, and I have no reason to believe they can't, he could easily become a Lion to remember for all those watching during his career. As with any draft pick, he could fail utterly, but it is much harder to fail if you are willing to work hard, play hard, and learn from good coaching.

Yes, I like the pick, though I would have liked about a handful of other options too. One of those "can't go wrong" things, possibly. There are no guarantees in the draft.

As the night proceeded suddenly it was announced the Lions had traded up, to 12, from 32. I dreaded learning what it cost. I only realized later on that the Lions traded with a division rival in the Minnesota Vikings. A huge no-no. You don't trade with division rivals. The Lions did, and according to the value charts, actually came out on top, if you care about that sort of thing.

The cost to move up 20 spots in round 1 was to move down 12 spots in round 2 AND to completely give up to the Vikings the 2nd overall pick in round 3 (number 66). I don't know yet who the Vikings will take at 66, and that will play into the value of this trade heavily, but for now just know I absolutely HATE trading two draft picks for one draft pick. That's like trading two dollars for one dollar in my book. True it doubles the odds that you have a counterfeit buck, but I just don't care for it in a general sense.

So the Lions trade two picks to move up and then select a wide receiver. Not just any WR but Jameson Williams, who tore his ACL just a number of months ago. So an injured player. In the first round. Trading away two picks to do it, along with moving down 12 spots in round 2. I was/am not happy about that.

Now, having said all that, Williams is a very fast WR (when his knees are working). He gets open, is a bit underweight but not under height (you can't grow taller but you can gain muscle mass), and he has good hands and plays fearless, when he can actually walk. So it may take some time to heal, to get into condition, to learn the NFL from an injured position which is harder than from a healthy position. But eventually, it is quite possible, the pick will be a huge difference maker on a team that needs that sort of player. There are asteriks all over the place on this pick, it is a gamble, it was a target, it might work out great, or not. Most believe it will work out great, I have no reason to think overwise, but I'm a Lions fan, my thinking on this type of situation might be rather skewed, to say the least.

Williams was the 13th player on my board, despite his injury. The Lions selected him 12th. So the tally to date is, got the 1st place player second and the 13th place player twelth. No reaches, no falling into the lap. The Lions are worse off for round 2, and lost out an early third round pick, so there is ground to be made up, and I'm curious to see what is made of day two. Nervous yes, but curious also. Who will they target next and what will the cost be?

Oh, and Williams bio? Here you go... from the same source... https://www.thehuddlereport.com/blog/?p=2290 and you might note, that at 1.40, it makes him the best player in the draft based on film alone (no defensive player scored above 1.41 and no offensive player either). So at least one person thinks the Lions did fantastic, and others will surely follow.

Me? I'm still upset about the trade. The drafting of an injured WR in round 1. And having to consider I just might be wrong. That part really sucks.

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