it's like I'm on crazy pills. he's not a gm. he should not be on the list. Kubiak's system and rockstar wade drafted our best players. Watt, Hopkins, merciless, brown with gems like foster, bouye, brandon brooks, newton(r.i.p), and now griffin. Play action and zone were a thing of beauty. Meanwhile, The Brady system has drafted C.J and minihands on offense. Romeo has gotten his players then some, KJ..Mckinney(should have been a pro bowler) and Clowney who has turned out to be one of the elite defensive players. Romeo's defensive schemes don't happen without clowney. Reader is going to be good. It seems the Mcnair family only meddles when they're frustrated or embarrassed so I actually like it that Rick is basically the consigliere. unless B.O.B's chosen qb takes us to a superbowl, Rick smith will continue to speak and carry out the orders of the Mcnair Family for the next 60 years. With sub par quarterback play, houston had tom brady throwing tantrums like the little spoiled brat he's turned to post 2005 in the playoff game. I hope this regime finally makes up their mind on who they want to run that chinese backwards avocado ice cream ugg wearing offense because this team can play with the best due to their defense. Take that for data.
Exactly. It's tough to knock him on 1st round picks since most of them have been at the least solid contributors to this team. However, the big knock is that beyond the 1st round he has rarely had much success.
I disagree with his point system. Nothing about the draft is easy - but first round picks are, relatively, the easiest picks and shouldn't garner the most points. I'm OK with R1 "fire hits" getting more points because there IS a difference between drafting JJ Watt and, say, Chris Long. And Smith's nine-year track record of hitting in the first round IS impressive. But it's still the "easiest" round to find success. The Texans have gotten better with rounds 2-3 - but it's oddly been a problem that pre-dates Smith. Remember, in an expansion year, one of Casserly's 3rd round picks didn't make the team. My guess... just a guess - nailing 2nd and 3rd round picks is the hardest thing to do in the draft, generally - and I'd wager most teams struggle with. And whatever deficiencies the Texans have shown in rounds 2 and 3, I think they've more than made up for it with rounds 4-7 + UFA, where they've done quite well.
Thats the craziest thing to me. I agree nothing is easy about the draft but how do you miss on rounds 2-3, but do particularly well in rounds 5-6-ufa? Usually the 5th and beyond guys are nothing more than depth and special teams. We need more front end starting talent and thats why ricky hasnt done well in my eyes. Hell, If he nails just 1-3, he would have job security for the rest of his life. Oh wait, he already has that?
I think rounds 2-3, especially, are difficult because you're trying to find the happy medium between BPA and BPA *who fits a need.* After that, I think teams tend to take more of a true BPA approach. Also, physically unspectacular but productive/winning players in college tend to slip and they can often be "easier" finds later in the draft. If I'm not mistaken, a fair amount of Houston's rounds 4+ picks recently have been SECers/from big-time programs. Again, they've done better lately. McKinney was a good pick; I think Nick Martin *will* be a good pick. And XSF and CJF are both solid starters with some upside. They also selected Brandon Brooks, who has been a very good starter - with better cap management (and foresight), he'd be here now. When you consider those guys were paired with Mercilus (Brooks), Clowney (XSF and CJF), Johnson (McKinney) and Fuller (Martin) - those are decent hauls for the first three rounds of a typical draft.
I won't operate under the assumption that Rick is making the decisions. It was Kubiak-Wade drafts followed by O'Brien-Crennel drafts.
This is clearly why dude hasn't been fired... He simply gets the requested players of whoever the coach at the time asks him to get...that's it.
Silly media, Ricky is never under pressure! Which NFL general managers are under the most pressure as draft nears? Houston Texans executive vice president/GM Rick Smith signed an extension last summer that runs through 2020. But how can there not be pressure when you still haven’t stabilized the quarterback position and just gave up a second-round pick to get rid of Brock Osweiler and his salary?
He's supposedly highly thought of for whatever that's worth. He was with the Chargers for much longer than he was with the Colts. And he has been a finalist for a few GM jobs lately.
http://ftw.usatoday.com/2017/05/nfl...2017-bill-belichick-john-schneider-john-elway Spoiler 32. Buffalo Bills: Brandon Beane 31. Colts: Chris Ballard 30. 49ers: John Lynch 29. Jets: Mike Maccagnan 28. Jaguars: Dave Caldwell 27. Buccaneers: Jason Licht 26. Rams: Les Snead 25. Dolphins: Chris Grier/Mike Tannenbaum 24. Saints: Mickey Loomis 23. Redskins: Bruce Allen 22. Bears: Ryan Pace 21. Eagles: Howie Roseman 20. Chargers: Tom Telesco 19. Lions: Bob Quinn 18. Texans: Rick Smith Yes, the Brock Osweiler deal was a disaster. That the Texans still managed to make the playoffs despite fielding one of the league’s worst starting quarterbacks says a lot about the job Smith has done putting together the rest of the team. He’s a good general manager who just can’t seem to figure out the quarterback position. Maybe Deshaun Watson is the answer, but I’m not so sure. 17. Titans: Jon Robinson 16. Giants: Jerry Reese 15. Browns: Paul DePodesta/Sashi Brown 14. Vikings: Rick Spielman 13. Ravens: Ozzie Newsome 12. Bengals: Marvin Lewis/Mike Brown/Katie Blackburn/Duke Tobin 11. Chiefs: John Dorsey 10. Panthers: Dave Gettleman 9. Falcons: Thomas Dimitroff 8. Steelers: Kevin Colbert 7. Raiders: Reggie McKenzie 6. Cardinals: Steve Keim 5. Cowboys: Jerry Jones/Stephen Jones 4. Broncos: John Elway 3. Packers: Ted Thompson 2. Seahawks: John Schneider 1. Patriots: Bill Belichick