personally, outside of fowler, i'm not that big on taking any of the other OLBs at 6. now admittedly i'm going on the so-called draft experts, but to me, the grades on all of them are all over the place, and i do not think any of them (except fowler) represent value at the 6 pick. i am one who says to take the BPA (at a relative position of need), so i'd rather take either of the QBs or the top 2 WRs with the 6 pick than "reach" for one of the OLBs. heck, i could probably be convinced to take gurley over the other LBs. i'm assuming williams is off the board, but if he's there, that presents a conundrum to me, since it's not a "relative position of need", but imo, he'd qualify for BPA (especially if it means cooper, white, fowler and both QBs are off the board).
i also think we will play a lot of 4-2-5 sets on passing downs, as bowles seems to prefer that alignment, and with our stacked d-line, we could put coples as the 4th lineman for that set. so i'm not as big on the need to find a 3-4 OLB that most others here are...at least not if it means "reaching" for an OLB with a premium pick.
my draft options at 6 would sort of read as:
1 - take a QB (winston or mariota)
2 - try to trade down
3 - WR (cooper or white)
4 - fowler
5 - if 1-4 aren't possible, then i would take the highest rated player on my board between williams, the OLBs, O-line, and gurley
the 5 outcome is only possible if the first 5 picks are QB, QB, WR, WR and fowler in some order. if that's the case, williams is still there, making a trade quite possible.
so i guess this is a long way of saying that i'm in the minority of not really wanting to go OLB with the
#6 pick, with the exception of fowler, who consistently seems to rank as the best player at that position.