Jason La Canfora, the man responsible for such insightful pieces as Kyle Shanahan angers people and won't be successful, is now taking Packers coach Matt LaFleur to task for claiming the Packers ran out of first round value when it came time to move up for Jordan Love.
His evidence is basically who they did not trade up for and those they did not stay put to draft:
1. Packers did not move up for Kenneth Murray, a WR or a center.
2. Packers did not take Patrick Queen or Jordyn Brooks when each would have been available at 30.
He ignores some things that we know about the Packers: they almost never target WR in the first round. They almost never target ILB in the first round. They have not taken an interior OL in forever that early (Verba and Wahle were ticketed to be tackles).
The Savage Rule Exception: In my head, this rules out trading up into the low 20s for a WR or Murray as they had signed Funchess, Canadian Boyfriend, and Kirksey; so unlike the Savage pick (deep safety), there was not a starting lineup gap where literally no one capable of playing the position existed on the roster.
They wren't trading up for Ruiz even if LaCanfora underestimates the chances of Linsley being a cap casualty next year.
So where does this leave Jason's theory?
We don't know who else they contact about moving up (the only story we got was hearing Schneider talking about talking to the Packers). And we don't know who they might have been targeting.
We do know teams do not usually have 32 players with first round grades. Packers don't like taking Round 2 grades in Round 1.
How hard did they try to move up for Jefferson or Murray, if at all? No ones knows, least of all LaCanfora.
It has been reported that Gute was thinking about Lock last year, but unlike Love, he was not able to move up to get him as the Broncos jumped in front.
So did the Packers target Love all along? I doubt it. They had three more years to look in the first round for a QB for Rodgers was done.
I believe its possible Love was their last first round grade. We just don't know hard how they tried to move up for any others.
His evidence is basically who they did not trade up for and those they did not stay put to draft:
1. Packers did not move up for Kenneth Murray, a WR or a center.
2. Packers did not take Patrick Queen or Jordyn Brooks when each would have been available at 30.
He ignores some things that we know about the Packers: they almost never target WR in the first round. They almost never target ILB in the first round. They have not taken an interior OL in forever that early (Verba and Wahle were ticketed to be tackles).
The Savage Rule Exception: In my head, this rules out trading up into the low 20s for a WR or Murray as they had signed Funchess, Canadian Boyfriend, and Kirksey; so unlike the Savage pick (deep safety), there was not a starting lineup gap where literally no one capable of playing the position existed on the roster.
They wren't trading up for Ruiz even if LaCanfora underestimates the chances of Linsley being a cap casualty next year.
So where does this leave Jason's theory?
We don't know who else they contact about moving up (the only story we got was hearing Schneider talking about talking to the Packers). And we don't know who they might have been targeting.
We do know teams do not usually have 32 players with first round grades. Packers don't like taking Round 2 grades in Round 1.
How hard did they try to move up for Jefferson or Murray, if at all? No ones knows, least of all LaCanfora.
It has been reported that Gute was thinking about Lock last year, but unlike Love, he was not able to move up to get him as the Broncos jumped in front.
So did the Packers target Love all along? I doubt it. They had three more years to look in the first round for a QB for Rodgers was done.
I believe its possible Love was their last first round grade. We just don't know hard how they tried to move up for any others.

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