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I'm sensing a prior personal dislike between biff and Ross Read.
he was the 8th safety taken.
like the langford pick i really don't understand people's inability to grasp the idea of 4th and 5th round picks. with very very few exceptions, you're not getting high caliber starting players after the first 3 rounds. they all have issues, some major. the impact players who fall to later in the draft almost always do so for reasons of character or injury.
so looking at amos as a 5th round pick, he's tremendous value. does he have holes in his game? yes. but he's also got abilities that many safeties drafted above him do not have. that doesn't mean he's going to be an all-pro safety. but when looking at 5th round picks, if you can get a player who contributes on special teams, it's a good pick.
it seems like a lot of people really wanted brett hundley for some reason and were pissed that we picked actual NFL capable players instead of some crappy quarterback prospect who can't read a defense to save his life.
There's a major discrepancy in Amos' 40- time from the combine 4.56 to his pro day 4.39. That's also a pretty big consideration when evaluating him.
Folks are missing the most interesting part of that whole article. It's not Amos. It's Fangio:
"Dashon Goldson was a fourth-round pick who developed into a good safety under Fangio. He struggled once he left Fangio and took big bucks down in Tampa Bay. Fangio's system makes slightly above average free safeties play to a Pro Bowl level."
Folks are missing the most interesting part of that whole article. It's not Amos. It's Fangio:
"Dashon Goldson was a fourth-round pick who developed into a good safety under Fangio. He struggled once he left Fangio and took big bucks down in Tampa Bay. Fangio's system makes slightly above average free safeties play to a Pro Bowl level."
. There's nothing drastically different between Fangio's system and Lovie Smith 's defense.