Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah went into his first NFL draft with a GM seat to trade a plan down from the No. 12 pick and accrue more assets. He has been fairly open about that being the plan.
Adofo-Mensah and company did what they set out to do, sending the No. 12 and 46 picks to the Lions for picks 32, 34, and 66. That was the first of a league-high six trades the Vikings made over the three days of the draft. They were happy with the deal that was made and the players they ended up with, and The controversial Lions trade was supported by outcome-based chartsGeneral Chat Chat Lounge
The issue, at least in some of the eyes, is that Adofo-Mensah didn’t get a good return on the trade-based traditional charts. Those charts, most notably the Jimmy Johnson version that has been around forever, assign a point value to each pick and have long been used to set the market for deals.
An anonymous NFL executive raised an interesting point A recent story from The Athletic’s Mike Sando: Because Adofo-Mensah did not stick to the charts in the trade with the Lions, it may have sent a message that it would send OK for other GMs to offer low-ball offers in the future.
“I get that in his mind, you compare and contrast the two scenarios and in his mind, he liked the other scenario better,” said one exec. “But you set an example for future trades. They already know you are an analytics guy, so you are probably going to want to trade down, and then with your first trade, you go pretty far from the traditional point system, so it sets. Maybe our first offer will always be lower because we know it’s Kwesi and he’ll want to trade down. “
One exec who spoke to Sando liked the trade for Minnesota, based on the idea that players drafted in the 12 to 66 range that are all that different.
“Looking at isolation and putting a dollar value on each one of them, I have the Detroit-Minnesota trade as a win for the Vikings, because my curve is pretty flat and the Vikings got that third-round pick,” an exec said. “Don’t get me wrong, I love Jameson Williams, but it’s one of those things where you just never know the player.”
But again, some of the issues with Adofo-Mensah’s big move were the potential precedent set by not sticking to the established market.
“Analytics tell you draft picks have value and teams tend to underestimate the value of later picks while overestimating the value of higher picks,” said one exec. “So if you made a trade like Kwesi did, the value was accurate, but the problem is, you missed the trade market because you needed to get more. Even if it was the right value, you left money on the table. “
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According to Sando, the NFL is “still trying to pick up the scent on Adofo-Mensah’s first draft as GM.”
“It looked like they were just trading to trade,” said an exec. “They got some picks. Maybe it worked out. I don’t know. Interesting situation. “
An evaluator Sando spoke to the Vikings about some of the picks they made, while another executive was surprised by the move out of the 12 given the consensus idea that there was a drop-off in talent after the first 14-16 players.
“My theory is they didn’t think the corner, [Trent] McDuffie, was worth the 12th pick, “said an evaluator. “If they thought it was a deep corner draft and this [Andrew] Booth kid and [Akayleb] Evans can play, then trade trade for Minnesota. “
I recommend checking out the full article from Sandowhich has this kind of anonymous league insight on all 32 teams’ drafts.
A similar story from ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler The idea that the league had around Adofo-Mensah was going to trade no matter what.
A first-time general manager eschewing his first draft pick for the move to the right back 20 spots might seem like a surprise, but for those who know Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, this was a telegraphed move. “He’s trading out. Guarantee it,” said an AFC scout. “He’s all about value and volume.”
Another note from Fowler’s piece: Oklahoma linebacker Brian Asamoah II, who got the Vikings with the No. 66 overall pick, “was consistently mentioned among scouts as an underrated player in the draft process.”
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