Washington gave up a bounty to land the Baylor quarterback, trading away
multiple high draft picks to select him No. 2 overall in the 2012 NFL Draft.
Failure is giving up
multiple high draft picks to trade up and get a QB who doesn't pan out.
Not exact matches
This
draft season, particularly over the last six weeks, I have asked
multiple members of the Cleveland Browns organization — which owns
picks no. 1 and 4, in addition to three second - rounders — what I thought was a very stupid question: Have you considered ignoring all norms and
drafting two quarterbacks
high in the
draft?
Much of that meant losing games, stockpiling
picks,
drafting players with
high lottery
picks, and blowing up your team's core on
multiple occasions.
Anyone questioning whether the Wolf Pack have enough fuel to sustain a deep run need look no further than their first two games in the NCAA tournament, when they outlasted a pair of
high - major opponents with
multiple projected first - round NBA
draft picks between them by making double - digit comebacks in the second half.
Not
high enough to reach the Top 10 and not a
draft spot that will receive
multiple picks when traded.