horrorfreak13
04-29-2006, 10:13 PM
Here's something that I found on ESPN's website I'd figure I would spread around
Here's the list.
100. Cedric Jones, New York Giants (No. 5 overall pick, 1996)
Unbeknownst to the Giants, Jones was blind in one eye and couldn't play on the left side. On the other hand, it did mean the Giants shifted another young defensive end named Michael Strahan from the right side to the left, so maybe this should be regarded as a great pick in a twisted, fortuitous way. Jones finished with just 15 career sacks.
99. Steve Chilcott, New York Mets (No. 1, 1966)
In the early years of the baseball draft, there was a clear bias against college players. For instance, in 1966 only three college players were taken in the first round. So while the Mets drafted Chilcott, a high school catcher who never reached the majors, they left Arizona State outfielder Reggie Jackson for the A's to take with the second pick.
98. Michael Smith, Boston Celtics (No. 13, 1989)
Career scoring average: 5.0 ppg. Could've had: Tim Hardaway, Shawn Kemp, B.J. Armstrong, Vlade Divac, Clifford Robinson. A few years later, the Celtics tried to correct that mistake by
taking
97. Eric Montross, Boston Celtics (No. 9, 1994)
Career scoring average: 4.5 ppg. Could've had: Eddie Jones, Jalen Rose, Aaron McKie. And don't even bring up Greg Kite
96. Todd Blackledge, Kansas City Chiefs (No. 7, 1983)
Ahh, the year that makes NFL draftniks all twitchy and happy -- John Elway, Dan Marino, Jim Kelly, Ken O'Brien, Tony Eason -- and that's just the quarterbacks. (Eric Dickerson, Curt Warner, Bruce Matthews and Darrell Green also went in the first round that year.) But Blackledge was the one first-round QB who didn't pan out: He played 46 career games and finished with more picks (38) than TDs (27).
95. Tim Couch, Cleveland Browns (No. 1, 1999)
It was the first pick for the new Browns, and while Couch wasn't awful in his five seasons with Cleveland, you wonder what would have happened if the Browns had selected the guy who went second, Donovan McNabb. Maybe we would have been spared the whole Rush Limbaugh Affair and the Dry-Heaving During the Super Bowl Affair and the T.O. Affair
You know, let's just get 20 years' worth of quarterbacks out of the way:
94. Joey Harrington, Detroit Lions (No. 3, 2002)
93. Akili Smith, Cincinnati Bengals (No. 3, 1999)
92. Cade McNown, Chicago Bears (No. 12, 1999)
91. Jim Druckenmiller, San Francisco 49ers (No. 26, 1997)
90. Heath Shuler, Washington Redskins (No. 3, 1994)
89. Rick Mirer, Seattle Seahawks (No. 2, 1993)
88. David Klingler, Cincinnati Bengals (No. 6, 1992)
87. Dan McGwire, Seattle Seahawks (No. 16, 1991)
86. Todd Marinovich, Los Angeles Raiders (No. 24, 1991)
85. Andre Ware, Detroit Lions (No. 7, 1990)
84. Kelly Stouffer, St. Louis Cardinals (No. 6, 1987)
83. Chuck Long, Detroit Lions (No. 12, 1986)
Combined Super Bowl titles by those teams after drafting those QBs: Zero. Mamas, don't let your sons become first-round quarterback selections.
82. Matt Anderson, Detroit Tigers (No. 1, 1997)
Anderson threw about 100 mph (105 on the Fox radar gun) at Rice, so the Tigers made the perplexing decision to draft a relief pitcher with the top pick. Like the time they hired Bo Schembechler as team president, this one didn't quite work out.
81. Desmond Howard, Washington Redskins (No. 4, 1992)
The Heisman winner from Michigan was the only wide receiver taken in the first round in '92 -- but maybe the Redskins should have skipped the receivers like everyone else: Howard caught just 66 passes in three seasons before the Redskins gave up on him. He did later resurface as a kick returner and was the Super Bowl MVP for the Packers, but he finished with just seven career TD catches.
The bottom line is, drafting a receiver in the top 10 is like playing poker online: It looks fun and exciting and you envision big-play potential and then you see the flop.
Of the 13 receivers taken in the top 10 between 1992 and 2002, five (David Terrell, Peter Warrick, Ike Hilliard, J.J. Stokes, Howard) have never had a 1,000-yard season, and two others (Koren Robinson, Michael Westbrook) have had just one. Since 2003, top-10 receivers Charles Rogers and Reggie Williams also look like potential busts.
80. Derek Jeter, New York Yankees (No. 6, 1992)
What, you want to defend this pick? Do you like to steal candy from little kids? Imagine, for a moment, if the Expos had taken Jeter with the No. 3 pick instead of B.J. Wallace: Montreal would now be playing in its fabulous, 21st-century stadium, Jarry Park II, where free agents like Alex Rodriguez and Gary Sheffield take pay cuts just to play in baseball's most luxurious ballpark and high-five Youppi! after hitting game-winning home runs. It's a place where the Expos are going for their sixth straight division title and fans admit, "We don't really care about the hockey playoffs this year" as they flock to see Jeter captain their beloved Expos. True, there would be no baseball in our nation's capital, but that would be a small price to pay to see Jeter plying his trade in Montreal pinstripes.
79. Joe Smith, Golden State Warriors (No. 1, 1995)
It's not that Smith is a bad player -- he has a career 12.4 scoring average -- but this pick symbolizes the Warriors' inability to ever make the right choice. They selected the college-groomed Smith over Kevin Garnett. Two years later, they once again took a more polished, lower-ceiling college player in Adonal Foyal over a high school kid named Tracy McGrady. And you wonder why Golden State hasn't made the playoffs since 1994?
78. Kenneth Sims, New England Patriots (No. 1, 1982)
A Lombardi winner at Texas, Sims was a one-man wrecking crew in college; according to collegefootballnews.com, he recorded an incredible 131 tackles as a junior defensive lineman. The consensus top pick in '82, he started for a few years, but never became a star.
77. Kwame Brown, Washington Wizards (No. 1, 2001)
Brown might yet turn into a productive player -- he's only 24 -- but not in Washington. The Wizards passed on Pau Gasol, Jason Richardson, Joe Johnson, Richard Jefferson, Troy Murphy and Tony Parker.
76. and 75. Steve Emtman and Quentin Coryatt, Indianapolis Colts (No. 1 and No. 2, 1992)
We'll cut the Colts a little slack since Emtman, the Outland and Lombardi winner from Washington, suffered knee injures. But Coryatt, a linebacker from Texas A&M, never did much in his six seasons with the Colts other than drop a sure interception that would have sealed the '95 AFC title game.
74. Tito Nanni, Seattle Mariners (No. 6, 1978)
The Mariners drafted the high school outfielder from Pennsylvania over a Michigan State wide receiver who dabbled in baseball named Kirk Gibson -- much to the protestations of a scout named Jerry Krause. Yes, that Jerry Krause.
73. through 56. The first 18 picks of the 1983 baseball draft
It was probably the worst baseball draft ever -- of the first 17 picks, only the No. 1 pick (Tim Belcher, who didn't even sign with the Twins), the No. 2 pick (Kurt Stillwell) and the No. 16 pick (Brian Holman) did anything in the big leagues. But the 19th pick, he turned out OK -- Roger Clemens.
55. Alexandre Daigle, Ottawa Senators (No. 1, 1993)
Maybe it wasn't his fault that he was billed as the "next Mario Lemieux," but he's drifted among six different teams (not including stints back in the minor leagues) and has never scored more than 51 points in a season. In hockey, the No. 1 overall pick is usually a star -- recent picks have included Sidney Crosby, Alexander Ovechkin, Rick Nash and Ilya Kovalchuk. Would the Senators have won a Stanley Cup by now if they had drafted the No. 2 guy, Chris Pronger?
54. Danny Ferry, Los Angeles Clippers (No. 2, 1989)
Ferry refused to sign with the Clippers -- which actually was the best thing to happen to the Clippers franchise for many years, considering Ferry's ensuing lackluster career.
53. Bill Bene, Los Angeles Dodgers (No. 5, 1988)
No, that's not Billy Beane, the Oakland general manager. This guy was a hard-throwing right-hander who was wilder than Charlie Sheen on vacation in Cancun during spring break. Bene rarely pitched at Cal State Los Angeles, but the Dodgers clocked him at 100 mph and took him over such future big leaguers as Jim Abbott, Robin Ventura, Tino Martinez and Alex Fernandez. At one point, the Dodgers wouldn't let him pitch batting practice to live batters and had him pitch to a department-store mannequin. Career totals in the minors: 18-34, 5.45 ERA, 516 innings, 543 walks, 502 strikeouts.
52. Mike Williams, Buffalo Bills (No. 4, 2002)
Nothing makes NFL scouts drool more than a mountain-sized left tackle with the feet of a ballerina and the arms of Chewbacca. That's what the Bills thought they drafted when they took the 6-6, 360-pound Williams ahead of players like Roy Williams, Dwight Freeney and Jeremy Shockey. Instead, Williams was shifted to right tackle (considered an easier position to play) before his rookie season, later tried at left guard, then benched and finally released after the 2005 season.
51. Andre Wadsworth, Arizona Cardinals (No. 3, 1998)
Nothing makes NFL scouts drool more than a 6-4, 273-pound defensive end with the quickness of a roided-up Ben Johnson and the strength of Magnus Ver Magnusson. Wadsworth was so highly touted coming out of Florida State that Jerry Jones reportedly offered two first-round picks and a second-round pick to Arizona. Wadsworth was decent as a rookie, although hardly equal to his billing -- just five sacks -- and then injuries set in.
Here's the list.
100. Cedric Jones, New York Giants (No. 5 overall pick, 1996)
Unbeknownst to the Giants, Jones was blind in one eye and couldn't play on the left side. On the other hand, it did mean the Giants shifted another young defensive end named Michael Strahan from the right side to the left, so maybe this should be regarded as a great pick in a twisted, fortuitous way. Jones finished with just 15 career sacks.
99. Steve Chilcott, New York Mets (No. 1, 1966)
In the early years of the baseball draft, there was a clear bias against college players. For instance, in 1966 only three college players were taken in the first round. So while the Mets drafted Chilcott, a high school catcher who never reached the majors, they left Arizona State outfielder Reggie Jackson for the A's to take with the second pick.
98. Michael Smith, Boston Celtics (No. 13, 1989)
Career scoring average: 5.0 ppg. Could've had: Tim Hardaway, Shawn Kemp, B.J. Armstrong, Vlade Divac, Clifford Robinson. A few years later, the Celtics tried to correct that mistake by
taking
97. Eric Montross, Boston Celtics (No. 9, 1994)
Career scoring average: 4.5 ppg. Could've had: Eddie Jones, Jalen Rose, Aaron McKie. And don't even bring up Greg Kite
96. Todd Blackledge, Kansas City Chiefs (No. 7, 1983)
Ahh, the year that makes NFL draftniks all twitchy and happy -- John Elway, Dan Marino, Jim Kelly, Ken O'Brien, Tony Eason -- and that's just the quarterbacks. (Eric Dickerson, Curt Warner, Bruce Matthews and Darrell Green also went in the first round that year.) But Blackledge was the one first-round QB who didn't pan out: He played 46 career games and finished with more picks (38) than TDs (27).
95. Tim Couch, Cleveland Browns (No. 1, 1999)
It was the first pick for the new Browns, and while Couch wasn't awful in his five seasons with Cleveland, you wonder what would have happened if the Browns had selected the guy who went second, Donovan McNabb. Maybe we would have been spared the whole Rush Limbaugh Affair and the Dry-Heaving During the Super Bowl Affair and the T.O. Affair
You know, let's just get 20 years' worth of quarterbacks out of the way:
94. Joey Harrington, Detroit Lions (No. 3, 2002)
93. Akili Smith, Cincinnati Bengals (No. 3, 1999)
92. Cade McNown, Chicago Bears (No. 12, 1999)
91. Jim Druckenmiller, San Francisco 49ers (No. 26, 1997)
90. Heath Shuler, Washington Redskins (No. 3, 1994)
89. Rick Mirer, Seattle Seahawks (No. 2, 1993)
88. David Klingler, Cincinnati Bengals (No. 6, 1992)
87. Dan McGwire, Seattle Seahawks (No. 16, 1991)
86. Todd Marinovich, Los Angeles Raiders (No. 24, 1991)
85. Andre Ware, Detroit Lions (No. 7, 1990)
84. Kelly Stouffer, St. Louis Cardinals (No. 6, 1987)
83. Chuck Long, Detroit Lions (No. 12, 1986)
Combined Super Bowl titles by those teams after drafting those QBs: Zero. Mamas, don't let your sons become first-round quarterback selections.
82. Matt Anderson, Detroit Tigers (No. 1, 1997)
Anderson threw about 100 mph (105 on the Fox radar gun) at Rice, so the Tigers made the perplexing decision to draft a relief pitcher with the top pick. Like the time they hired Bo Schembechler as team president, this one didn't quite work out.
81. Desmond Howard, Washington Redskins (No. 4, 1992)
The Heisman winner from Michigan was the only wide receiver taken in the first round in '92 -- but maybe the Redskins should have skipped the receivers like everyone else: Howard caught just 66 passes in three seasons before the Redskins gave up on him. He did later resurface as a kick returner and was the Super Bowl MVP for the Packers, but he finished with just seven career TD catches.
The bottom line is, drafting a receiver in the top 10 is like playing poker online: It looks fun and exciting and you envision big-play potential and then you see the flop.
Of the 13 receivers taken in the top 10 between 1992 and 2002, five (David Terrell, Peter Warrick, Ike Hilliard, J.J. Stokes, Howard) have never had a 1,000-yard season, and two others (Koren Robinson, Michael Westbrook) have had just one. Since 2003, top-10 receivers Charles Rogers and Reggie Williams also look like potential busts.
80. Derek Jeter, New York Yankees (No. 6, 1992)
What, you want to defend this pick? Do you like to steal candy from little kids? Imagine, for a moment, if the Expos had taken Jeter with the No. 3 pick instead of B.J. Wallace: Montreal would now be playing in its fabulous, 21st-century stadium, Jarry Park II, where free agents like Alex Rodriguez and Gary Sheffield take pay cuts just to play in baseball's most luxurious ballpark and high-five Youppi! after hitting game-winning home runs. It's a place where the Expos are going for their sixth straight division title and fans admit, "We don't really care about the hockey playoffs this year" as they flock to see Jeter captain their beloved Expos. True, there would be no baseball in our nation's capital, but that would be a small price to pay to see Jeter plying his trade in Montreal pinstripes.
79. Joe Smith, Golden State Warriors (No. 1, 1995)
It's not that Smith is a bad player -- he has a career 12.4 scoring average -- but this pick symbolizes the Warriors' inability to ever make the right choice. They selected the college-groomed Smith over Kevin Garnett. Two years later, they once again took a more polished, lower-ceiling college player in Adonal Foyal over a high school kid named Tracy McGrady. And you wonder why Golden State hasn't made the playoffs since 1994?
78. Kenneth Sims, New England Patriots (No. 1, 1982)
A Lombardi winner at Texas, Sims was a one-man wrecking crew in college; according to collegefootballnews.com, he recorded an incredible 131 tackles as a junior defensive lineman. The consensus top pick in '82, he started for a few years, but never became a star.
77. Kwame Brown, Washington Wizards (No. 1, 2001)
Brown might yet turn into a productive player -- he's only 24 -- but not in Washington. The Wizards passed on Pau Gasol, Jason Richardson, Joe Johnson, Richard Jefferson, Troy Murphy and Tony Parker.
76. and 75. Steve Emtman and Quentin Coryatt, Indianapolis Colts (No. 1 and No. 2, 1992)
We'll cut the Colts a little slack since Emtman, the Outland and Lombardi winner from Washington, suffered knee injures. But Coryatt, a linebacker from Texas A&M, never did much in his six seasons with the Colts other than drop a sure interception that would have sealed the '95 AFC title game.
74. Tito Nanni, Seattle Mariners (No. 6, 1978)
The Mariners drafted the high school outfielder from Pennsylvania over a Michigan State wide receiver who dabbled in baseball named Kirk Gibson -- much to the protestations of a scout named Jerry Krause. Yes, that Jerry Krause.
73. through 56. The first 18 picks of the 1983 baseball draft
It was probably the worst baseball draft ever -- of the first 17 picks, only the No. 1 pick (Tim Belcher, who didn't even sign with the Twins), the No. 2 pick (Kurt Stillwell) and the No. 16 pick (Brian Holman) did anything in the big leagues. But the 19th pick, he turned out OK -- Roger Clemens.
55. Alexandre Daigle, Ottawa Senators (No. 1, 1993)
Maybe it wasn't his fault that he was billed as the "next Mario Lemieux," but he's drifted among six different teams (not including stints back in the minor leagues) and has never scored more than 51 points in a season. In hockey, the No. 1 overall pick is usually a star -- recent picks have included Sidney Crosby, Alexander Ovechkin, Rick Nash and Ilya Kovalchuk. Would the Senators have won a Stanley Cup by now if they had drafted the No. 2 guy, Chris Pronger?
54. Danny Ferry, Los Angeles Clippers (No. 2, 1989)
Ferry refused to sign with the Clippers -- which actually was the best thing to happen to the Clippers franchise for many years, considering Ferry's ensuing lackluster career.
53. Bill Bene, Los Angeles Dodgers (No. 5, 1988)
No, that's not Billy Beane, the Oakland general manager. This guy was a hard-throwing right-hander who was wilder than Charlie Sheen on vacation in Cancun during spring break. Bene rarely pitched at Cal State Los Angeles, but the Dodgers clocked him at 100 mph and took him over such future big leaguers as Jim Abbott, Robin Ventura, Tino Martinez and Alex Fernandez. At one point, the Dodgers wouldn't let him pitch batting practice to live batters and had him pitch to a department-store mannequin. Career totals in the minors: 18-34, 5.45 ERA, 516 innings, 543 walks, 502 strikeouts.
52. Mike Williams, Buffalo Bills (No. 4, 2002)
Nothing makes NFL scouts drool more than a mountain-sized left tackle with the feet of a ballerina and the arms of Chewbacca. That's what the Bills thought they drafted when they took the 6-6, 360-pound Williams ahead of players like Roy Williams, Dwight Freeney and Jeremy Shockey. Instead, Williams was shifted to right tackle (considered an easier position to play) before his rookie season, later tried at left guard, then benched and finally released after the 2005 season.
51. Andre Wadsworth, Arizona Cardinals (No. 3, 1998)
Nothing makes NFL scouts drool more than a 6-4, 273-pound defensive end with the quickness of a roided-up Ben Johnson and the strength of Magnus Ver Magnusson. Wadsworth was so highly touted coming out of Florida State that Jerry Jones reportedly offered two first-round picks and a second-round pick to Arizona. Wadsworth was decent as a rookie, although hardly equal to his billing -- just five sacks -- and then injuries set in.