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Savage hopes to add to late (draft) hits
Saturday, April 19, 2008
BY Steve Doerschuk
REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER
Browns General Manager Phil Savage says time was on his side.
Often enough, he has had all day to position the Browns to make this one of those years to get a late draft steal.
Cleveland will sit out Rounds 1 through 3 next weekend, the first two unfolding Saturday. Savage has one pick in Rounds 4-7 on Sunday.
"We put a lot of time into Day 2, and I think it's going to pay off," Savage said. "We've got four cracks at it right now. We're hoping to find two players that can really be of help to us (in 2008) and two that can help us down the line."
Continued.......
Browns GM has time on his hands
Offseason trades leave team with no draft clout
Sunday, April 20, 2008 3:29 AM
By Bill Rabinowitz
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Phil Savage
BEREA, Ohio -- The 1999 NFL draft had just ended, and Phil Savage was upset.
As director of college scouting for the Baltimore Ravens, Savage had traveled the country evaluating prospects. He'd whittled down the list from the hundreds of players he and his scouts had seen.
But during the draft, the Ravens made a series of trades that resulted in them selecting only four players. In the hallway of the Ravens' headquarters, Savage couldn't hide his disappointment. All that work for four lousy picks.
Savage is now the Cleveland Browns' general manager. Once again, his team has only four picks -- none in the first three rounds.
Continued......
More about this season's upcoming schedule and other teams' schedules in our conference along with the Ratbirds QB situation and the possibility of a big trade back in 1999 with New Orleans. Interesting stuff.Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer.Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer did the Browns' coaches a big favor last week.
Looking at the Browns' five prime-time appearances in the 2008 schedule, Palmer told the Dayton Daily News: "I was shocked as anybody to see that because they're still a ways away from being a . . . They weren't even in the playoffs.
Continued
Schedule bits:
The Steelers matched the Browns with five prime-time games. Their opponents had a .580 win percentage last year -- highest in the NFL. The only difference from the Browns is Pittsburgh plays New England and San Diego while the Browns get Buffalo and Denver. Big drop-offs, there. . . . The Patriots have two sets of back-to-back games on the West Coast -- Oct. 5 at San Francisco and Oct. 12 at San Diego, and then Dec. 7 at Seattle and Dec. 14 at Oakland. New England coach Bill Belichick said he is contemplating keeping his team on the West Coast between the games to reduce travel. . . . The Chiefs finished the 2007 season with nine straight losses. "We've got to learn to win again," coach Herm Edwards said to reporters. They open the season at New England. The Patriots have won 19 straight regular-season games.
More regrets?
Bill Kuharich, former president of the New Orleans Saints, confirmed in a conversation last week that the team offered the Browns virtually their entire draft -- plus two high picks the following year -- to move up from No. 8 to No. 1 in the 1999 draft.
The Saints were intent on taking running back Ricky Williams. They eventually got him at No. 5 after Washington agreed to switch spots in the first round and take the Saints' third- through seventh-round picks, plus their first and third in 2000. The Saints had no second-round pick in 1999
More regrets?
Bill Kuharich, former president of the New Orleans Saints, confirmed in a conversation last week that the team offered the Browns virtually their entire draft -- plus two high picks the following year -- to move up from No. 8 to No. 1 in the 1999 draft.
The Saints were intent on taking running back Ricky Williams. They eventually got him at No. 5 after Washington agreed to switch spots in the first round and take the Saints' third- through seventh-round picks, plus their first and third in 2000. The Saints had no second-round pick in 1999
Bucks21;1144710; said:Hell even if the browns would have taken that trade they would have found a way to waste all of those picks on Gerrard Warrens of the world anyway.
I was thinking the same thing as I posted it but I thought it was interesting. They could have had every team's draft picks and still screwed it up.:!jlb1705;1144713; said:No regrets. Those incompetent ass-clowns would have just used those extra picks to bring in different crappy players in greater numbers. With a smart front office, you make that trade every time. The Browns' regime at that time was not smart enough to make the trade and wouldn't have been smart enough to make something of it even if they had.
More regrets?
Bill Kuharich, former president of the New Orleans Saints, confirmed in a conversation last week that the team offered the Browns virtually their entire draft -- plus two high picks the following year -- to move up from No. 8 to No. 1 in the 1999 draft.
The Saints were intent on taking running back Ricky Williams. They eventually got him at No. 5 after Washington agreed to switch spots in the first round and take the Saints' third- through seventh-round picks, plus their first and third in 2000. The Saints had no second-round pick in 1999.
We will need a slot receiver to replace JJ next year but hopefully we can get one through FA. I don't want to waste our limited draft picks on offense this coming draft.Buckeneye;1146809; said:While I would love to add depth to arguably one of the best receiving corps in the NFL, our pressing needs are on defense.