And to be fair, this ain't no Draft Day movie "OL no matter what" in round 1 type of stuff I'm talking about. If the BPA at 14 is far and away another position, go for that other position. But feels like that round 2-3 run is where we really get hurt (sans Rosengarten) and miss out on some guys we really like per my understanding. Even some of the OL they have picked in that range are not the guys they necessarily wanted to get there.
I think the issue with Round 2, if I am honest, is related to the success of our first round. In our first round, we've had tremendous success letting guys fall to us as sliders. But if you look at our 2nd and 3rd round picks, the failure there is often due to...
1. Red Flag Sliders (Sergio Kindle, Arthur Brown, Tim Williams)
2. Overvaluing need (e.g., Boykin)
3. Limited traits ceilings in players who hit their ceiling early without surplus value (e.g., Boykin)
4. Scheme misprojections where college role didn't translate to Ravens system (e.g., Kamalei Correa, Malik Harrison)
2. Taking gambles on athleticism translating to football
Our success has been from:
1. Traits over production bets (high RAS, length, explosiveness especially at EDGE; e.g., Justin Madubuike, Orlando Brown Jr who was also a slider)
2. Trusting tape over Combine (Mark Andrews)
3. Premium position focus (EDGE, OL, DL over off-ball LB, RB, WR; e.g., Brandon Williams, Ben Powers)
4. High Football IQ players with toughness and effort
I looked into why we have failed vs. succeeded in Rounds 2-3 and the defining reasons were:
Ravens succeed at drafting OL when they go after player with
a clearly elite trait (e.g., length, anchor, hand usage) and failed when going after guys who were just big and strong but limited athleticism.