We did this last year and figured it was time to update it for 2018.
Draft season, the season of hope for college players, NFL front offices, and all the fans, is a bemusing spectacle where hype increases media presence, which makes media conglomerates fat in the pockets. Fans love hearing about 40 times and athletecism composites and watching receivers work with quarterbacks at pro days.
Adventure? Excitement? A Jedi craves not these things.
You wanna draft like a champ? Let’s look at how champs draft.
Let’s take the last six Super Bowl champions and look at what positions they took in the first round (the positions they value most) for the five years prior to their title (because that’s how long you can extend a rookie first rounder’s deal and that’s the time period when they are ascending and in their prime).
In this window (six teams in a sliding five year window), there were seven cases where no pick was made by the team in the first round. Six times, this was because the team traded out of the first round – good teams know the draft is a crapshoot and that your best odds are having more chances. The one other time, there was no pick in the first round because of league-imposed punishment on those dirty, dirty cheaters, the New England Patriots – of course, the Patriots keep winning because they keep cheating and they don’t care.
Accounting for those seven no-picks, plus instances where teams traded back into the first round for multiple first round picks, there were 20 player selections in those 5 five-year windows.
Here is the rundown of what positions were selected:
9 Defensive Linemen
5 Linebackers
4 Defensive Backs
4 Offensive Lineman
2 Quarterbacks
1 Wide Receiver
Interesting, isn’t it? There’s a lot to be inferred from those picks.
Things that jump out as key takeaways are:
- 12 of the 25 picks were defense, most of them in the front 7 – defense wins championships
- 4 of the 47offensive players were linemen – the game is won and lost in the trenches
- The two QBs were Flacco (who won in his 5th year) and Wentz (who also technically won)
- The only skill position player was Nelson Agholor, who has 15 catches and 0 TDs in his 3 career playoffs games – not a game-changer by any means
Flashy positions, skill positions, the positions fans fawn over. But successful GMs, championship GMs, go for defense and lineman in the money round.
Don’t infatuate yourself with the athleticism of the skill position players, you can find receivers in the second. The Packers traded down to get an extra 4th round draft choice when they picked Jordy Nelson in the second round. The Falcons, on the other hand, traded two 1sts, a 2nd, and two 4ths for the right to pick Julio Jones – who looks smarter? The Packers avoided running backs in the first round of the 2013 draft and ROY Eddie Lacy fell to the second round as did Le’Veon Bell – do you need to spend a top-5 pick on Ezekiel Elliott when guys like Le’Veon Bell make it to the 2nd round? Rob Gronkowski made it to the second round, too. OJ Howard was a top 20 pick last year – why do that when you find Rob Gronkowski in the second?
There’s a lot of reason for this, which will be explored further the rest of the week’s articles, but the key for today is that the recent champions didn’t build their team by taking backs and receivers in the first round. The Cowboys took Zeke number 4 overall and he’s been great, but he doesn’t look like he’s carrying the ‘boys to a title any time soon. For as amazing a return as the Vikings got on AP over the years, they never hit the promised land. The Patriots, Broncos, Seahawks, and Eagles don’t have a lot of highly-drafted skill position guys, but they do have the last 5 Lombardi’s.
This is how you do it.
You can get skill position guys later, spend premium picks on defense and lineman. it’s not exciting, it’s successful. Don’t get starry-eyed – the recent champions have a proven approach: get defense and linemen early. Better yet, trade down.
For our complete draft coverage, please visit our 2018 Draft Central page.