
Originally Posted by
steelreserve
I'll let you in on a secret: 90% of the defensive players we drafted from 2004-2014 sucked ass for their entire careers. So while we were justifying it as "these rookies aren't contributing, so I guess most rookies don't contribute very much," actually the problem was that we just weren't drafting players who were any good.
No, really - 90% is no joke. 36 defensive draft picks over that time period, and Heyward, Timmons and Woodley were the only ones who became legitimate contributors. Plus I guess a handful of fringe players like V. Williams and Gay.
All the good defensive draft picks like Heyward, Timmons, Tuitt - not superstars their rookie years, but they did some things to unmistakably let you know that hey, this is promising. Meanwhile, on the offensive side of the ball, there was no shortage of players who contributed some in their rookie years, and that was a good indicator they would contribute as much or more later.
Put another way, if you go two years without showing even any good *signs* that you get it and are going to be challenging for a starting job - then you're in the position of having to be that guy who didn't get it, didn't get it, didn't get it, then all of a sudden everything clicked and you're 10 times better. That's rare. Yes, there are James Harrison stories once in a while, but for every one of those, there are 10 Curtis Brown, Joe Burnett, Tony Hills, Ryan Mundy and Stevenson Sylvester stories. Jarvis Jones and Shamarko Thomas - been here three years, not showing signs of turning the corner. Is my money on the chance that this year will be different, just "because?" Not really.
So no, it's not being spoiled-Steelers-fan, omg-sky-is-falling-cat-picture to worry if the rookies aren't at least showing some signs of life. On average, a guy's rookie season is a third of his career. Even for a star player, it's 10% of his career. It definitely is significant, and the good ones definitely tend to make a few plays and show signs of being good.