Being bad earns best picks
By Barry Wilner
Associated Press
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NEW YORK — The top dozen teams making picks in today's NFL draft earned that right by being bad. And not just during the 2006 season.
Many of them got their spots near the top of the draft by also having instability over a bunch of seasons. Take away Tampa Bay, choosing fourth this year, and you have 11 clubs with very little, if any, stability in the front office.
And while the Buccaneers won a Super Bowl under Jon Gruden after the 2002 season and still have him as head coach, they've also gone through several changes off the field, most notably losing general manager Rich McKay to Atlanta. McKay and former coach Tony Dungy put together much of the roster that won that NFL title, too.
Still, the Bucs are a model of continuity compared to the other teams who will go on the clock early at Radio City Music Hall. For instance:
"The way to get rid of it and take care of it is to win," Millen said. "That handles the whole thing. It's not difficult. The equation is not difficult, the winning part is difficult."
And not only for the Lions.
Arizona, which picks fifth, last had a winning record in 1998. It also has a new coach, Ken Whisenhunt, who comes from the winning environment in Pittsburgh. Will that help in the desert — and in the draft?
"I think he's going to bring a different attitude to this football team," QB Matt Leinart said, "an attitude that's been missing for a while. I think he's going to make us mentally tougher."
So many of the teams who will go on the clock early today have been hurting for a long time. If they mess up again this year, they'll be right back in the same spot in 2008.