Quote:
Originally Posted by Audi
Exactly. You may think that draft was a "surprise" but that's because you were probably following some mock draft on an Internet site.
"Polian recently said two things are true:
• For those who actually do the drafting, the first-round is rarely a mystery.
• It usually doesn't play out as those doing the mocking predict."
"He said the reason for that is the teams have access to data that those performing mock drafts don't often possess. For that reason, he said, some players fall down the draft board. A players' declining stock may be a draft-day surprise, but Polian said it's often because of a factor about which league personnel officials already knew."
“You have to really work hard to ignore the data. There are very few exceptions anymore. Hardly ever. They almost go off in many ways almost exactly how you have them rated.”
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I think it'd be common sense to say that those doing the drafting will be closer than the analysts. The ones doing the drafting have a better idea of the team's future, additional moves, etc that they have planned. Goes without saying imo