If his strategy is best player available, why did he trade up?
Yes emotional. I posed a basic question about direction of the organization. You kinda went on a rant about the draft.
Nothing we post matters to Mac.
The fact is, if we want to have some fun playing gm for a day, you need to have a focus. What are you trying to achieve? What are areas of improvement vs. Resources and players available. You don't just sit back and pick up some fa's on sale then go bpa and say let's see what kind of team we become.
What if every round bpa is a kicker? Do we draft 6 kickers?
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Why did they trade up? That's an easy one. Petty was by far their highest rated pick, also filled a need. Jax calls tells the Jets they have another team interested in the pick. Jax would rather trade with the Jets, and still get their guy.
So for a 7th round pick they get a player they may have had a low 3rd round value on.
Didn't rant at all. Simply relaying to you what Macc has said. I have no real reason to think he's lying. He's sure said it enough, tend to think he means it
Darryl Slater ✔ @DarrylSlater
"Need and the draft, I've seen a lot of mistakes being made over the years with that," Mike Maccagnan says.
11:13 AM - 24 Apr 2015
Darryl Slater ✔ @DarrylSlater
Factoring need "too much" into the process can often cloud a team's assessment of a prospect and lead to draft mistakes, Maccagnan says.
11:12 AM - 24 Apr 2015
Darryl Slater ✔ @DarrylSlater
Maccagnan again says pro free agency is the best place to fill roster needs. He prefers to take "best player available" approach with draft.
11:11 AM - 24 Apr 2015
FLORHAM PARK — Next Thursday through Saturday, in the Jets' meeting room during the NFL Draft, don't expect general manager Mike Maccagnan or anybody else to openly discuss how badly the team must fill a need at a certain position.
That goes completely against Maccagnan's philosophy, as he explained Friday at his pre-draft press conference.
These are topics Maccagnan has covered before — that he prefers to fill positional needs through pro free agency, and that he would rather pick the best player available in the draft than select based heavily on positional need.
He offered even deeper insight Friday into his thought process, as the draft approaches. He made it clear he isn't a fan of attempting to fill needs exclusively via the draft.
"To me, it's one of those pet peeves," he said. "Need and the draft, I've seen a lot of mistakes being made over the years with that. So I've been very diligent, when I'm given this opportunity [as a rookie GM], I'm going to try to keep it as separate as possible. Now, obviously, every team has needs. I get that. You want to solve them as best you can. But just because you take somebody, and if he doesn't pan out, you're still going to have the same need a year from now. And you won't have solved the problem."............
Maccagnan's aversion to drafting heavily based on need doesn't mean the Jets won't take an edge rusher with the sixth pick. It all depends on what their draft board looks like. If, at that point, an edge rusher is the best player available — based on the Jets' assessment — there's a good chance Maccagnan will take him.
"I tend to believe, you don't really make that need-based decision on draft day," Maccagnan said..........
"When you go out in pro free agency, it's a much smarter and, quite frankly, much more efficient way to fill needs, because you're basically comparing apples to apples when you go out and sign pro players. You can analyze the tape. You know exactly what they've done in the league. They have a history of a level of production. So in my mindset, you go out in the pro side, and if you're going to ideally fill needs, you fill needs there......................
"I think the draft, I tend to focus on, ideally, you want to take the best player available. .......................
Because of the evaluation challenges involved in the draft, Maccagnan likes to evaluate draft prospects independent of outside factors.
"You literally grade them, to the best of your ability, in a bubble," Maccagnan said. "When you start factoring your need into the player evaluation, you run the risk of skewing your [evaluation] process, because it's a very subjective process............