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  1. #73
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Quote Originally Posted by TheSpiderWebb View Post
    Hell most of us would probably do a better job then a lot of the TEAMS
    It's a good thing we have a good team setting the example. I wonder if other fanbases have boards as good at the draft as we are.
    "Please take with you this final sword, The Excellector. I am praying that your journey will be guided by the light", Leon Shore





  2. #74
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Excellector View Post
    It's a good thing we have a good team setting the example. I wonder if other fanbases have boards as good at the draft as we are.
    I'm sure the perennially bad teams like the Brownies do. The draft is basically their Superbowl





  3. #75
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Quote Originally Posted by TheSpiderWebb View Post
    I'm sure the perennially bad teams like the Brownies do. The draft is basically their Superbowl
    And they blow it every year.
    "Please take with you this final sword, The Excellector. I am praying that your journey will be guided by the light", Leon Shore





  4. #76
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    The ??? about should we have picked Cyprien instead of Elam, or Moore instead of Brown can be answered in one word : Ozzie. After the Ravens last five successful seasons, and a Super Bowl victory, I have faith in his (that includes the scouting staff too) judgement. Last draft, he picked GG in the 4th round over two highly regarded Centers. The man knows who he wants to play in Baltimore, and selects them better than teams that pick much higher... Bc





  5. #77
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    I wouldn't believe anything an agent said about the war room.
    Usually no one knows what goes on in the Ravens war room. It's highly unlikely anyone
    would have said anything about a struggle so how is this agent privy to that info?

    In fact, Dee says here they started sweating when names they liked came off the board so
    they moved up to get Brown. they moved in front of HOuston who was rumored to
    covet him, not Sio.

    Peter King also said Denver wanted Brown in addition to Houston so Oz moved in front of both.
    I always saw Brown mentioned as a first round possibility. A lot of posters here wanted and
    are excited we got both him and Elam.



    http://articles.baltimoresun.com/201...wn-draft-picks
    Last edited by AirFlacco; 05-01-2013 at 07:09 PM.





  6. #78
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Excellector View Post
    I too believe that Moore will become the better player.
    Can I ask why? I'm going with Brown, simply because that's who Ozzie went with, I trust in him.... dare I say it.... more than the sword.





  7. #79
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Quote Originally Posted by leachisabeast View Post
    Can I ask why? I'm going with Brown, simply because that's who Ozzie went with, I trust in him.... dare I say it.... more than the sword.
    Ozzie is quite possibly the only man powerful enough to wield the Excellector. Therefore, you are pardoned.

    Both players are explosive, but I like Moore's explosiveness a bit more. Both players are versatile, capable of playing inside and out. However, I like Moore's edge rushing ability better. Both are willing to take on blockers, but I think Moore attacks them with more enthusiasm. He just lacks power, which I feel he can develop over time.

    All in all, Brown is a good prospect, I just think Moore is a little better. Much like I think Cyrpien is a little better than Elam.
    "Please take with you this final sword, The Excellector. I am praying that your journey will be guided by the light", Leon Shore





  8. #80
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Quote Originally Posted by The Excellector View Post
    Ozzie is quite possibly the only man powerful enough to wield the Excellector. Therefore, you are pardoned.
    lool





  9. #81
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    How about nfldraftblitz.com? They valued him in 3rd round, BRown 2d.

    BTW, after Oz took Brown, Houston took Swearinger, not Sio who fell several more
    spots down after Denver took a RB. Oz said he liked both Brown and Swearinger not Brown and Sio so both Ravens and Houston rated Brown and Swearinger above Sio.


    http://www.nfldraftblitz.com/valueboard.html
    Last edited by AirFlacco; 05-01-2013 at 07:37 PM.





  10. #82

    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Actually Brown has the better play diagnosing skills between him and Moore and he (Brown) possess slightly better change of direction skills.





  11. #83

    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Check out this video of John Simon.

    Seems like a hell of a leader.

    Although Walsh's system of offense can compensate for lack of talent; however, defense is a different story. According to Walsh, talent on defense was essential and could not be compensated for. What did Walsh do in 1981? He acquired physical and talented players on defense.





  12. #84
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    Re: This Board Did a Great Job Preparing for the NFL Draft.

    Byrne Identity Draft edition:
    Draft Room Is Nerve-Wracking

    Ozzie Newsome is so calm during the draft.

    I’m not.

    Don’t like my heart broken.

    I’ll give you an example. In 2007, we owned the 29th pick in the first round. We loved Joe Staley, a tackle from Central Michigan, but knew he was a long shot to make it to us. As the first round evolved, Staley was dropping, and the conversation in our draft room turned to what team could take Staley.

    As we got closer to our selection, I had canonized Staley. In my mind, he was going to be our left tackle for a decade, go to Pro Bowls and was a player we could not live without.

    Then, bam! The 49ers grabbed Staley with the 28th selection. My heart broke. I needed a Cher/Moonstruck slap to the face.

    Ozzie didn’t bat an eye. “Tell them to write down this name: Ben Grubbs, guard, Auburn. And give it to the league.”

    Both Staley and Grubbs became Pro Bowl players.

    So it was last Thursday night in the 2013 first round. We loved Matt Elam, and I was engaged to him by the middle of the first round. “We’ll all sleep really well tonight if Elam gets to us,” Assistant General Manager Eric DeCosta said.

    The belief by our scouts was that this was a good draft for safeties and inside linebackers, two areas of need for us. There were more outstanding linebackers than safeties, so the hope was that we could grab the safety in the first round and the linebacker in the second.

    St. Louis and Dallas, two teams we believed wanted to draft safeties, traded down in the first round. Those teams would still pick in front of us, and our intelligence indicated that both teams had Elam high on their boards.

    The Rams, at the 30th pick, took LB Alec Ogletree. Whew! Chad Alexander, our assistant director of pro personnel, who was on a headset to the NFL Draft Headquarters in New York, then said: “Dallas’ pick is in.” We all stared at Chad. “It’s Frederick” (the center from Wisconsin).

    High fives all around. Ozzie called Matt Elam, and he became our 2013 first-round choice.

    Second-Round Drama

    “We did sleep well after taking Elam,” DeCosta said. “And then we all had the kind of feeling with Arthur Brown that we had with Torrey Smith a few years ago. We thought there was a chance that Torrey could get to us in the second round, and he did. We wanted Brown, and we thought we had a shot.”

    As the second round unfolded last Friday night, it became clear that Ozzie and Co. were not confident Brown would make it to our spot, the 62nd slot in the draft. Newsome and DeCosta started calling teams above us, hoping to move up. Seattle responded. They had the 56th spot. Moving up six places – by giving up our second-, fifth- and sixth-round selections – we drafted Brown. Even more enthusiastic high fives after that.

    Sports Illustrated’s Peter King then wrote on Monday: “It’s well known how smart Ozzie Newsome and his staff are at working the draft. … Sources tell me Brown was going to be Houston’s pick at 57, and he was a strong consideration for Denver at 58. Great trade for Baltimore.”

    The ‘Purple Board’

    We all know that the draft now lasts three days with rounds four through seven taking place on Saturday. To help keep the enthusiasm and focus for those picks, our scouts and John Harbaugh stay up late Friday night and “re-stack our board.”

    Imagine the largest wall in your house. That’s our draft board. The best players are at the top of the wall, listed in columns by positions. By the end of Friday night and the second round, the top half of the wall was clean – all those players had been drafted, and the card with their names on it had been taken off.

    So around 11:30 p.m., the scouts and Harbs, under the direction of owner Steve Bisciotti, started moving names up the wall, and the wall looked filled once again. This extra space allowed the scouts to spread the names enough so that clear separation could now be seen among the remaining draftable players.

    Steve invited scouts to show their passion for players they wanted. Great discussions took place, and there were verbal battles that, this year, lasted until 2:00 on Saturday morning. It is clear Steve loves this sparring. “He encourages scouts to fight for their guys,” DeCosta explained.

    One thing Steve orchestrates is impressive. When the new board – nicknamed by the scouts as the “purple board” – was completed, Bisciotti asked each scout to put his name on the player he most wants the Ravens to take that day. Three scouts: Joe Douglas (our “National” scout), Milt Hendrickson (Midwest) and Andy Weidl (Northeast) put their initials on John Simon’s card.

    You know what happened: we drafted Simon, a linebacker and team captain from Ohio State, near the bottom of the fourth round. Just before we selected Simon, Ozzie and Steve brought the three scouts into the room so they could be there when we picked the guy they showed so much passion for earlier that day. Kind of cool.

    Best Moment Of The Draft

    When Ozzie called Aaron Mellette to tell the Elon receiver we were taking him in the seventh round, this is what we heard Ozzie say: “Yes, this is real. This is Ozzie Newsome of the Baltimore Ravens. No, no, this is no joke. Look at the area code: 4-1-0, that’s Baltimore. Really, yes, really.” After convincing him that he was being drafted by us, Oz handed the phone to Coach Harbaugh. Harbs welcomed him to the Ravens and then said: “He dropped the phone, I think. Aaron, are you there? Aaron? I think they’re watching his name on ESPN right now. Aaron, are you there? I can hear a lot of shouting and screaming. There you are. Guess you and your family were watching TV.”

    Fun. We shouldn’t forget how dramatic it is for these young men to be drafted. Not to mention getting drafted by the Super Bowl champs.

    I’m Just Sayin’

    Had the privilege of saying a few words to the rookies last night. Here’s what I noticed right away: first-rounder Matt Elam sat in the first row, center; second pick Arthur Brown was in a suit wearing a purple shirt with a purple tie; and third-rounder Brandon Williams, second row, center, was also in a suit. Had never seen a rookie wear a suit to the first meeting. Most were in sweats.

    Didn’t see it, but heard: After Simon signed his contract yesterday afternoon, he asked if he could use the weight room for a lift – and that’s what he did. Impressive.

    Talk with you soon,

    Kevin
    http://www.baltimoreravens.com/news/...1-9472564403fc

    Awesome stuff.
    Last edited by bt12483; 05-03-2013 at 02:26 PM.





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