Raps in 4 wrote:earthtone wrote:Raps in 4 wrote:m
A higher pick is always going to be better than a lower pick. That is a statistical fact.
…but that’s not a statistical fact at all. A higher pick has a higher likelihood of becoming a good player, sure, but “is always going to be better than a lower pick” is patently untrue.
The draft pick itself, not the player selected.
Picking 1st is better than picking 3rd which is better than picking 9th. The odds of the player you want still being on the board decrease the later you pick.
Some people are arguing that you can find elite talent anywhere in the draft. And you can. But the draft is still an odds game and a higher pick will always be better.
But what you are referring to is the outcome of having more players to chose from, not the outcome of what players actually are.
What history has shown is in fact that higher picks and having the ability to chose from more players doesn't necessarily translate to getting a better player. This is the statistical fact......you are only referring to having a better probability which isn't statistical fact....it's probability
Given the fact that we KNOW that having a better pick DOES NOT necessarily translate into better players or lead to team success, you have to build a team knowing this risk and decide if it is worth it to go for a higher pick.