Those of you with a few years under your belt might think it was the Packers drafting Tony Mandarich and passing on a trio of Hall of Fame players who were chosen immediately afterward: Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas, and Deion Sanders.
Doh!
Nonetheless, that bonehead move pales in comparison to this one:
I was fourteen when that trade went down, and even I knew it was a horrible, horrible trade. What hurts also is seeing that the Packers were thinking about Archie Manning. Most of you young'ns know only of Peyton and Eli, but their dad was a damn good quarterback hisself. He played for Mississippi in college, and I remember watching him once on t.v. and thinking he was really good.
What is interesting as well about the article is how casually Devine tossed around the names of other QB's they were considering trading for. No GM today that I know of would do such a thing. Imagine Ted trading for a guy, then actually providing a reporter with a list of the other guys at that position he was also thinking about trying to get instead.
And imagine Ted - or most any GM - saying that they didn't have to worry about replacing the draft picks they'd given up because the team has a bunch of guys in IR that would provide that depth. So no worries about giving up your first, second, and third round choices in the next draft, and your first and second rounders in the draft after that!
What did they get in return? A 34 year old QB, who ended up throwing nine td's and twenty-nine interceptions for the Pack. Yikes. That team was set back for a decade or so in part because of that trade.
Now that was the worst personnel move in Packer history.
Doh!
Nonetheless, that bonehead move pales in comparison to this one:
I was fourteen when that trade went down, and even I knew it was a horrible, horrible trade. What hurts also is seeing that the Packers were thinking about Archie Manning. Most of you young'ns know only of Peyton and Eli, but their dad was a damn good quarterback hisself. He played for Mississippi in college, and I remember watching him once on t.v. and thinking he was really good.
What is interesting as well about the article is how casually Devine tossed around the names of other QB's they were considering trading for. No GM today that I know of would do such a thing. Imagine Ted trading for a guy, then actually providing a reporter with a list of the other guys at that position he was also thinking about trying to get instead.
And imagine Ted - or most any GM - saying that they didn't have to worry about replacing the draft picks they'd given up because the team has a bunch of guys in IR that would provide that depth. So no worries about giving up your first, second, and third round choices in the next draft, and your first and second rounders in the draft after that!
What did they get in return? A 34 year old QB, who ended up throwing nine td's and twenty-nine interceptions for the Pack. Yikes. That team was set back for a decade or so in part because of that trade.
Now that was the worst personnel move in Packer history.

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