JohnnyKILLroy wrote:Hope we avoid shiny new toy syndrome and make the most of our pick in the first round. Hopefully this is the last time we have a top 10 pick for a very long time. Hopefully Poles doesn’t spend it On RBs TEs or Safeties. Trench warfare wins championships. We sign a few guys and people think it’s enough. It’s never enough we want to be in a position where we’re rotating studs in on both sides of the ball continually and endlessly.
1) if i never hear the words 'trench' or 'trenches' again in a football context it will be too soon
2) stud QBs are obviously the biggest factor in winning titles. babying our young QB by investing endlessly on the offensive side to "support" him does not help him become a stud
3) good safeties are analytically more important to winning than good linemen. the 2023 and 2024 eagles are the perfect example. main difference was the secondary. 2023 team lost 5 of their last 6 in reg. season by an avg. of 10+ points because of their secondary. then they got blitzed by the bucs in the playoffs. their strong D-line didn't do **** to make the depleted secondary look good. what did they do? they drafted 2 stud corners. they brought in a good safety in gardner-johnson who played well on a reasonable contract. 180 degree turnaround and championship
A dominant defensive line will make our linebackers and secondary play elite.
can easily say the exact opposite as well. can't get to the QB if receivers are regularly open. and designed quick release passes neuter a strong D-line
To let up on either side of it would be a huge mistake and a waste of money resources and draft picks.
overloading any position group is what is wasteful (see bears 2024 receiving corps). overpaying guys is wasteful. trading draft picks for fairly paid players and/or expiring contracts is wasteful (sweat, allen, bates, thuney, jackson)