No ugly. Some incomplete due to having to wait on a certain pick to play, but we can't say that's bad yet, and it might end up being very good. And there are aspects of that pick that are very good.
So:
Good:
- Used our 29th pick to add a top flight CB, thereby addressing the Achilles heel of this team last year.
- I really liked the Daniels pick - that guy has size and has made some utterly fucking insane catches. OBJ-like ... or dare I say it ... Puka-like in that respect. Contested catch monsters are always good to have on your roster.
- I liked the TE, even though we have a pretty full room now. If McVay is going to lean on 13 personnel (or even 12), the pick makes sense.
- We got a solid backup/depth for Poona, another widebody NT that eats blockers for breakfast and funnels RBs like a giant boulder in the middle of the creek.
- While taking Simpson was a risk, it was a calculated risk that makes sense. Simpson landed in the best possible situation he could have among the 32 teams - whatever the second best situation was, it's nowhere near as good as the situation he landed in with the Rams. That already gives his development a leg up. And as a couple of media guys mentioned, there is precedent about QBs drafted in this manner becoming successful starters - Rodgers behind Favre, Love behind Rodgers, Mahomes behind Alex Smith. Those guys all had at least one season to sit behind a quality vet and learn, and all have had success. So while we don't know for sure what will happen a few years down the road, we at least know that Simpson is in a great situation now. This is not like drafting Sam Bradford, who came to a team with no line and no weapons other than a late career SJ and coaches who were offensively retarded.
- Incomplete - Simpson, because we have to wait. But we can't say it's a bad pick yet, and the situation he's in drastically increases the likelihood we will eventually say it's a good pick.
- The bad: No solid return man. We still have X, but would have liked to seem them explore that position more.