Great article about how teams capitalize on the NFL Draft. They use Chase Stuart's draft pick value chart (not Jimmy Johnson's), they calculate how much value the sum of their picks in the decade have represented.
He then does a calculation the purpose for which I am not sure I understand.
He is taking each picks Average Value (off the Stuart chart) and then making them a function of a team's entire draft class for the year. I am not sure how that helps year to year comparisons, but there is it. Its turns the picks expected career AV into an expected percentage of that draft class's AV. It tells you how heavily that players weighs on that class' expected performance.
The Packers, as you can surmise from the two main charts, don't have a ton of draft capital. Gute has traded up even in years where the Packers pick early in each round. But most of this is just the residue of playing all for most of the decade.
But they are Top 5 in gathering draft value from that capital.
He then does a calculation the purpose for which I am not sure I understand.
However, since we will want to compare drafts from different years to each other, we need to normalize these values so we can compare different years fairly. So each draft position is converted from an expected CarAV into a percentage of the total expected CarAV of the entire draft.
The Packers, as you can surmise from the two main charts, don't have a ton of draft capital. Gute has traded up even in years where the Packers pick early in each round. But most of this is just the residue of playing all for most of the decade.
But they are Top 5 in gathering draft value from that capital.

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