It’s not just the No. 1
By BOB LABRIOLA
Steelers.com
The first-round pick is the one that attracts all of the attention. Fans,
media, anyone and everyone with an interest in the NFL either wants to know, or
believes they already know, which player will be the No. 1 pick of their
favorite team.
That’s no different with Steelers fans in the days leading up to the 2008 NFL
Draft, but if they’re truly interested in judging the team’s performance during
the April 26-27 exercise they would get a more accurate picture by looking
beyond the first round.
Director of Football Operations Kevin Colbert has been on the job since 2000,
and there hasn’t been a bad first-round pick in the bunch. Of the eight No. 1s
this century, three have been voted to the Pro Bowl – Casey Hampton, Troy
Polamalu and Ben Roethlisberger – and seven have been starters on Steelers teams
that made the playoffs. Only Plaxico Burress is no longer with the team, and he
helped the New York Giants upset New England in Super Bowl XLII, and only
Lawrence Timmons, 2007’s first-round pick, has not yet started a game for the
team.
“No. 1 picks, when you are picking from so many guys at that stage, you
should hit on those guys,” said Colbert. “The higher the pick then really the
higher the evaluation so they should be good players. You hope to avoid
mistakes, and that’s not to say that we won’t make them, but we have had some
good No. 1 picks. Again, they are supposed to be good.”
As exemplary as the Steelers’ performance in Round 1 has been, they admit
there is room for improvement during the later rounds. Up until this year, the
first day of the NFL Draft included three rounds, and it has been Rounds 4-7
where the Steelers have had difficulty finding players who developed into
starters or quality backups.
From 2000-06, the Steelers made 20 picks in the first three rounds; 12 of
those 20 were starters and another three earned significant roles on either
offense or defense. By contrast, the Steelers made 33 picks in rounds 4-7 during
that same span, and while five became starters there were 16 who never played a
down for the team.
Certainly, it is more difficult to find NFL starters when drafting in the
later rounds, but the Steelers have been able to add quality players as
undrafted free agents, which proves they can get the evaluations correct. Their
past two team MVPs – James Harrison in 2007 and Willie Parker in 2006 – both
entered the league as undrafted rookies. And this is said to be a class where
there are going to be quality players available deep into the draft.
“Prior to the combine and our meetings, we really said this was a strong
draft,” said Colbert, “and coming away from the meetings, we still feel it is
very strong. There have been a few kids who have been eliminated either for
medical issues, character issues, or maybe we over-evaluated him to begin with,
but to offset that, there have been a lot of kids we have upgraded. So we still
think it’s strong.”
The Steelers would be wise to exploit that strength, because if this is a
team without any glaring holes to fill in its starting lineup via this draft,
it’s also a team in need of reinforcements at every position except quarterback
and tight end.
“I think there are lot of kids who can go in the second or third round who
can definitely help us,” said Colbert.
And that’s exactly how the New York Giants went from an 8-8 team in 2006 that
made very few moves during the following unrestricted free agency period into a
team that beat the Packers in Green Bay for the NFC Championship and then upset
the 18-0 New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.
The Giants had seven picks in the 2007 NFL Draft, and every one of those
rookies made a contribution in the 17-14 win that earned the franchise its third
Lombardi Trophy.
“(Rounds) 1, 2, 3 – you can’t miss on those kids,” said Colbert. “If those
kids aren’t pushing for starting positions at some point while they’re here,
then they weren’t evaluated correctly. Rounds 4-7, you’re looking for depth. If
those guys turn out to be starters, then credit goes to them and to their
coaches for exceeding what we thought they could do.”
The Steelers have had some success in the later rounds of recent drafts,
because that’s where they added Larry Foote and Verron Haynes and Clark Haggans
and Brett Keisel and Willie Colon and Ike Taylor. But they haven’t had enough
success, and very little of it has come lately.
“Quite honestly, the mistakes we have made, the players that haven’t worked
out for us have been taken on the second and fourth rounds,” said Colbert. “For
whatever reason – maybe we had too much time to think about the fourth-round
picks – those players weren’t properly evaluated and we made some mistakes. So
we have to be careful.”