Thompson on draft: 'There's always surprises'
Packers general manager Ted Thompson met with the media on Wednesday morning to preview the 2016 NFL draft. Here are some highlights from his news conference:
Opening statement:
Good morning, I’d like to start off saying that the draft, as we can see today, is a very popular thing. I want to make sure people understand my appreciation for this organization, our coaching staff. Everybody works so hard to try to help us put it all together. Obviously, the personnel people, the football operations people, all the coaches, player personnel, video people – all those people are directly involved in the actual draft process whether it be helping in terms of logistics or arranging for travel for guys we bring in for visits. It’s an enormous amount of work. It seems like most of the attention is direction is directed to me – that’s not warranted because we have a whole team of people who help put this on. We still have a week to go, but we think we’re close to be about where we need to be. I was thinking about this – when we played Washington in the playoffs, we were staying downtown. I went out for a walk. It turned dark. It was 8:30 in January in Washington D.C. and I’m walking along, I’m trying to dodge traffic – there’s a grass area and there’s cars going this way and this way and I’m in this grass area. Right there is the Capitol building and it’s under construction. I just stopped there in the middle of it – I didn’t go out for a purpose, but when I got there I said this is the reason I went out for a walk. I hope the same thing happens with the draft. That when it’s done we’ll say this is the reason we put in all this work.
On how the first round plays out:
Parts of it do and parts of it don’t every year. I don’t know if one is any more than another. There’s always surprises. I guess it’ll be a little bit of both.
On if they do mock drafts:
No, we don’t. We’ve tried to, but we’re so personal with it and so locked into it, we make it up.
On draft-room emotion:
There are gut-wrenching times to where you’re so close to getting the perfect player for your time and they might get picked right in front of you. As it happens, you were better with that happening than the first place.
On picking 27:
It depends. When you’re picking 27, it’s much more difficult to come up with the actual 27 names. It gets to be a little bit mathematically difficult to predict. You have groups of players. You try to say these guys are pretty close. It’s constantly evaluating.
On Leventee McCray:
We thought he had some good snaps in Denver. We think he has a nice body type. He has good athletic ability. He’s shown the ability to be an outside backer.
On the roster:
I think it’s a good roster. I feel pretty good about it going in. We have a number of players we’ll add to our roster.
On inside linebacker:
We think it’s a pretty good group. They’ve been able to get some experience. Sam’s experience got thwarted a little bit with an injury.
On drafting best player available:
We try to draft the best player available. We think it’s important to stay focused and try to take the best player. I think that from a personal standpoint. Situation about needs isn’t normally a temporary one. As long as you’re taking really good players and best players you can identify, then you’re in some respects you’re able to stay a little bit in front of the curve. There can be some of both. You can be in a position where this solves problem A on our roster, but he’s also the best player available. If you get lucky where you can address both – if it comes to one or the other, I prefer to take the best player.
On excitement of draft time:
I don’t know if excitement is the word I’d use. This was the first week our players were back and it’s certainly good to see them in the building and moving around, and that sort of thing. The draft thing gets dragged out so long that you’re kind of ready to do it one way or another.
On changes in the pre-draft process:
There’s been some. There’s a lot more information now. Sometimes that’s good, sometimes that’s not so good. There’s all kinds of analytical stuff you need someone paying attention to. It’s more work. It’s more comparisons. Because there’s more time, I feel like it kind of evens the playing field. Most teams are probably similar.
On if defense has what it needs to move Matthews back outside:
We’re not playing anybody tomorrow. I hope not. I think there are places on our rosters where we’re relatively thin when looking at the 90-man roster. We have a number of guys who were on the team before this spring and going forward.
On Jared Cook:
He’s very athletic. Great catch radius, big target. We think he’ll add some stuff to us athletically of the offensive side of the ball.
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Situation about needs isn’t normally a temporary one. As long as you’re taking really good players and best players you can identify, then you’re in some respects you’re able to stay a little bit in front of the curve.
Thompson was thinking about the summer of 2016 about 2 years ago.
Doesn't appear Ted is as convinced as MM that Matthews moving back to OLB is a lock.
So I'm watching the video on Packers.com... LMAO w/Ted talking about the Draft Room:
"we have a large draft room, with several walls on it, and on each of those walls there are name tags... sometimes it's name tags of our current players, and sometimes it's name tags of our current players and their projected contract extension... no not contract extension, the expiration. There's a wall for all kinds of things. If you can think of a it, we have a wall for it in our draft room."
Reminds me of Drumpf and his "words" quote. "We use a lot of words. We have the best words"
I for one stopped trying to figure out what TT will do and just trust him to do the right thing. And I am with Hungry5. I honestly and truly think TT seriously thinks that far ahead in his draft strategy.
TT's the best Chess player.
TT's the best Poker player.
Boris will cry when TT retires.
Ahhhhhh.. What?
"I was thinking about this – when we played Washington in the playoffs, we were staying downtown. I went out for a walk. It turned dark. It was 8:30 in January in Washington D.C. and I’m walking along, I’m trying to dodge traffic – there’s a grass area and there’s cars going this way and this way and I’m in this grass area. Right there is the Capitol building and it’s under construction. I just stopped there in the middle of it – I didn’t go out for a purpose, but when I got there I said this is the reason I went out for a walk. I hope the same thing happens with the draft. That when it’s done we’ll say this is the reason we put in all this work"
It's an analogy of his draft process.
Right there is the Capitol building and it’s under construction. I just stopped there in the middle of it – I didn’t go out for a purpose, but when I got there I said this is the reason I went out for a walk.
Or he had a stroke.
I was thinking the pesky stroke flared up again. Or it's code for drafting Derrick Henry at 27.
Ted, the master of talking without really saying anything.
packerboi posted:......... I went out for a walk. It turned dark. It was 8:30 in January in Washington D.C. and I’m walking along, I’m trying to dodge traffic – there’s a grass area and there’s cars going this way and this way and I’m in this grass area.
TT should avoid grass areas. We all know how that worked for JFK. Just saying ....
JFK wasn't in the grass.
Wait....are you saying TT is the shooter from the grassy knoll?!?!?!
No, TT is a target for other NFL teams wishing to make GB a worse team. Maybe figuratively speaking .........
Stroke. Me. Stroke. Me?
Boris posted:TT's the best Chess player.
TT's the best Poker player.
Boris will cry when TT retires.
I am with you boss. I for one would not want to be the blackjack or poker dealer if TT walks in to a casino. What I love about TT is that the ship is steady under him. We know that he has a plan for today and an even better plan for tomorrow. Sure we don't win it all every year but just to be in the hunt works for me.
As a Packer fan who remembers only to well what the 70's and 80's was like I enjoy every second knowing the team is in good hands.
What Heckler said.
I remember the years when Dan Devine was in charge. Ugh.
packerboi posted:Doesn't appear Ted is as convinced as MM that Matthews moving back to OLB is a lock.
I dont believe MM ever said the Claymaker was going back to OLB for 100% of the snaps. Rather, I recall that MM said he'd be at OLB quite a bit, but would also be in other spots some as well per scheme and opponent. More like a "rover" kind of guy to take full advantage of his skill set. SO whatever percentage it is, 80-20 (OLB vs ILB), 70-30, 60 - 40 etc, I believe MM indicated we will still see Mathews move around some regardless of how the draft turns out. Those percentages will change from game to game to exploit any weakness in the opposing team.
YATittle posted:What Heckler said.
I remember the years when Dan Devine was in charge. Ugh.
Dan was a great coach for us...until he broke his leg.
Should have been his neck!
Long live Bob Hyland!
The biggest surprise is he never said "quite frankly".
oldschool posted:YATittle posted:What Heckler said.
I remember the years when Dan Devine was in charge. Ugh.
Dan was a great coach for us...until he broke his leg.
Devine broke his leg early in his first season. It was his second season he took the Packers to it's first playoff game since Lombardi. So it was AFTER he broke his leg he was a "great" coach - not before. Then came 2 losing years, the Hadle trade, and the need for another coach.
Boris posted:TT's the best Chess player.
TT's the best Poker player.
Boris will cry when TT retires.
Eliot Wolf will be there to sop up your tears.
TT is a great judge of talent. Difficult to replace. The GM'ing duties I'm not too worried because I feel confident Eliot will be excellent due to his father & watching TT work from his fathers tree.
The "scout" portion of TT...BIG shoes to fill
Here's a scenario for you Boris.
Thompson retires after next years draft and Eliot gets the GM job. Then Eliot consults with his dad and hires Thompson as a scouting consultant. Thompson is on record as saying he'd like to keep doing that (the scouting).
Eliot gets the GM Job and Ted says he wants to come back but they won't let him and then he goes to the Lions.
This man really needs to go on tour. I'd so buy tickets.
#Packers GM Ted Thompson at the beginning of his press conference: "I was going to tell a story today but I don't have a story to tell."
Damn.....and I love Ted Thompson stories too!
Freaking Forrest Gump of GM's. Just stumbling his way through and winning at every step. Life is like a box of draft picks, ya never know what you're gonna get.
TT telling a bedtime story: "If I knew a bedtime story I wouldn't tell you. Now go to sleep."
Boris posted:Damn.....and I love Ted Thompson stories too!
Stories?
Which one(s)?
packerboi posted:
This man really needs to go on tour. I'd so buy tickets.
#Packers GM Ted Thompson at the beginning of his press conference: "I was going to tell a story today but I don't have a story to tell."
Didn't have one today.
Dr._Bob posted:TT telling a bedtime story: "If I knew a bedtime story I wouldn't tell you. Now go to sleep."
For some reason you reminded me of this:
Worth the bump.
“Why interject something that’s not in the minds of anybody in the building?” Thompson said. “It’s somewhere out there in Neverland, where somebody’s dreamed up something down in the basement of their mom’s house.”
He's definitely talking about X4. Probably also Aaron Nagler.