at least early. My biggest problem is that I have no information on medicals, or off the field red flags or for the most part failed drug tests.
I want to say I had 30 of the 32 in the first round right.
I probably had 75% in the 2nd and 3rd rounds if you combine my 33-78.
After that it gets dicey as teams start snagging personal favorites. I have mine, they have theirs.
The big board is just really a guide. Tools like Kiper can use his like this: With the 87th pick in the draft the Los Angeles Rams select Kylie Fitts LBer Utah. Kiper comes on and says that was a reach, I had him as my 105th rated prospect. They could have waited a round...blah blah blah
I do mine because I enjoy the process and I enjoy sharing it with the Herd, and hopefully it helps guys not into the draft get a feel for someone. If I am around 10-20 positions I feel pretty good.
The toughest thing is I don't build this board on who is drafting where. So guys slide and jump around to where the teams that need them pick. If I have a QB rated 115th but no team needs a QB until 130ish, he's sitting there until then or someone trades up for him.
Flipper has figured all this stuff out and has gone to what I feel is the smartest way for amateurs to do this - put them in pick ranges. That way people don't get stuck on certain numbers. Like Mason Cole - Sun thinks I'm not a huge fan when in reality, he easily could have fit in the end of round 5 to the end of round 6. Flipper would just put him in that 175-225 range and be done with it. Its really a smart way to do it.
Alyo does the same thing just differently. Both really smart, because ranges are actually easier group guys. I fight in my head over and over precisely where a guy belongs when in reality, I'm gonna be off, so why struggle internally.
Don't waste your time looking back, you're not going that way. - Ragnar Lothbrok